show/hide this revision's text 2 some people just don't like Starbucks

A deadline is one thing. Having someone breathing down your neck is another.

  • Deadlines are useful in the sense that they set a goal for completion.

  • Breathing down someone's neck is only useful if you want to irritate them and make them panic.

I would make sure they know the basic syntax of the language using some trivial problem. Then I would give them a significantly more complex problem and tell them to whiteboard a solution, without writing any code.

If they come up with a good solution on the whiteboard, tell them to take a laptop, go to Starbucksa quiet empty office, implement the solution, and show it off in one hour. That is one way of giving some a deadline, without breathing down their neck.

If your company pays coders to design application while jumping out of airplanes, breath down their neck. I would not want to work for a company like that though.

show/hide this revision's text 1

A deadline is one thing. Having someone breathing down your neck is another.

  • Deadlines are useful in the sense that they set a goal for completion.

  • Breathing down someone's neck is only useful if you want to irritate them and make them panic.

I would make sure they know the basic syntax of the language using some trivial problem. Then I would give them a significantly more complex problem and tell them to whiteboard a solution, without writing any code.

If they come up with a good solution on the whiteboard, tell them to take a laptop, go to Starbucks, implement the solution, and show it off in one hour. That is one way of giving some a deadline, without breathing down their neck.

If your company pays coders to design application while jumping out of airplanes, breath down their neck. I would not want to work for a company like that though.