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At times in my career I have been in charge of the interviewing.
This is how I approached it:
GOAL: "Can the person fit in with the group, and contribute".
From the resume I glean;
1. I can see a lot of years of experience. (or perhaps "enough" years).
2. I see education.
3. I typically see a list of what the candidate feels is his core skills
(they may not be in a technology that we use, because we are using something new)
4. I invite a few dev's to participate, with the only rule being "You cannot use Google to ask
questions. (If you have to look it up, that is not fair).
5. The Goal is to get a feel for the candidate as a fellow team member.
The Goal is NOT to humiliate, judge, or ask complex algorithms.
I do not ask tech questions of a CS Grad, or post Grad.
Guess what? They might get it wrong. So what? All this proves is you can ask anybody anything,
and they MIGHT get it wrong.
If the Candidate is not proficient it will be revealed.
(Yes, this may wind up as an exercise in futility) -That's ok.
I might even leave him on the team, and adjust to his/her abilities.
For example - they be highly skilled in SQL, and less proficient in Angular.
You are never going to find "The Golden Candidate".
Work Ethic is what I look for. If you can bash your way to learning Angular, that is good enough.
You can spend all your time humiliating people, or you can cut to the chase.
Keep It Simple, keep it moving.
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Well said. You can always spot the folks here who have actual hiring experience.
DumpsterJuice wrote: You are never going to find "The Golden Candidate".
It's like a relationship... there's no such thing as perfect. If you think that you're gonna die alone.
DumpsterJuice wrote: Work Ethic is what I look for. If you can bash your way to learning Angular, that is good enough.
You can spend all your time humiliating people, or you can cut to the chase.
Yeah exactly. Especially when most interviewers just Google stuff to ask before the interview anyway. For systems programming I do think algorithms are important actually. But for most LOB jobs... nope. In the past I've aimed for personality, work ethic, and overall competency. We can always Google the algorithms this day and age if we ever get stuck. You can't teach personality.
DumpsterJuice wrote: Keep It Simple, keep it moving.
Yup. Anyone in this industry long enough knows that devs have the expectation you're not allowed to have a life or family. You're supposed to spend your life 24/7 behind the computer on the off chance someone asks you a question you may not know the answer too. Shudder the thought. It's sad really because those devs rarely learn how to actually work with actual humans.
Jeremy Falcon
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If I am being honest, I incorporate Stack Overflow a lot in my daily work.
If you take away the internet, I don't even have a help file in Visual Studio anymore.
I am going out on a limb here, but its the truth - I can't really code well without access to the internet.
My memory is not what it used to be, when we had no "Intelli-sense".
I used to have to memorize the Parameters of built in Method calls.
Guy come in, says "I don't have Angular experience, but it's because they only want people with experience"
and this one:
Requirements
"10 years Experience in " ( technology that is not 10 years old)
Keep It Simple, keep it moving.
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Everyone Googles stuff though this day and age. What we are expected to know is growing exponentially. Even the younger guys experience things like JavaScript fatigue. It's almost to the point it's getting out of control.
DumpsterJuice wrote: I used to have to memorize the Parameters of built in Method calls.
Same here about IntelliSense. It's ubiquitous as an AC... we'll never not have it in humanity again... like never. Same goes for spell check.
DumpsterJuice wrote: "10 years Experience in " ( technology that is not 10 years old)
Jeremy Falcon
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Are you sure that was the reason you were passed on?
Could it be an excuse rather than to say you were too old?
Anyway I am glad I never had to undergo any test of programming skill in my entire 45 year career as a programmer. When I did change jobs I was accepted due to my reputation.
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dshillito wrote: Are you sure that was the reason you were passed on?
Could it be an excuse rather than to say you were too old? That's what I was told and I trust them. They were great people. If there was another reason besides that like ageism it would surprise me. I suppose one can never know 100% but I trust them.
dshillito wrote: Anyway I am glad I never had to undergo any test of programming skill in my entire 45 year career as a programmer. When I did change jobs I was accepted due to my reputation. That's a great point. In this day and age, one must market themselves. It's a skill I wish I knew a long time ago. Better late than never...
Jeremy Falcon
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I was asked that question once....I told them "I've never done that particular function before so I would search for a solution before reinventing the wheel". I got the job.
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I know exactly what you mean. It's fair to put newbies to the test like that and see how they approach a task, and whether they get to the actual result. But asking an experienced programmer is an insult. At the very least they should make sure that the interviewer or whoever else judges your results is equally experienced and able to appreciate what you're doing. And if they don't understand why you chose to approach the problem the way you did, they should be fair enough to ask why you did that, not require you to recreate the exact solution that's on their checklist.
GOTOs are a bit like wire coat hangers: they tend to breed in the darkness, such that where there once were few, eventually there are many, and the program's architecture collapses beneath them. (Fran Poretto)
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Agreed
Jeremy Falcon
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Most companies go out of business buy not hiring than by hiring. 30 years ago as a young developer, I bought into the hire only the best of the best. My team would punish the candidate with insane technical interviews. Naturally we did end up with some of the best devs but we rejected a ton of other devs that probably could have done the job.
As an experiment many years ago we changed the hiring practice and if the developer had the basic skills we would sit down talk with them as if they were 'already' on the job. If they participated and started solving problems, coming up with solutions and contributing they were provisionally hired for 3 months. If they worked out during that time we hired them permanently. The results were amazing. Our rejection rate dropped to about 15% and we ended up with some of the best code in the company.
In looking back on the process it is clear to me what changed. When you punish candidates you only get those candidates that are desperate enough or unsure enough of their own skills that they will put up with that abuse. When you talk to candidates as the professionals they are you get a whole new level up interaction and find out what you really need to know. Which only comes down to ONE thing: Will they work with your team and be a contributing member.
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This is a fantastic post and I wish more companies would really see it this way.
It is amazing that your company considered what they were doing to devs in interviews and tried a new way. Very cool!!!
If I just needed some code done then hire the best you can find (which means probably not in-house anyways, just go find someone on the web to do the work).
However, what your company did was to build a real team of contributing individuals where people's input was respected. Amazing.
I'd much rather hire:
1. the nicer / team-friendly / good-attitude candidate
2. who has good-enough skills
3. who is willing to grow and learn
4. who has energy! the desire to make things excellent
I'd much rather hire that person than the "genius" who can pass all these freaking algorithm tests and is obnoxious.
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raddevus wrote: I'd much rather hire that person than the "genius" who can pass all these freaking algorithm tests and is obnoxious.
Exactly... especially when they can't even get the job done because all they study is algorithms and not the tech being used.
Jeremy Falcon
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NightPen wrote: In looking back on the process it is clear to me what changed. When you punish candidates you only get those candidates that are desperate enough or unsure enough of their own skills that they will put up with that abuse.
You sir, deserve a +100 for this statement. It's true. For instance, I know I can run circles around most people with CSS. This is a frontend job after all. But I'd also like to have kids before I die. Life needs balance.
NightPen wrote: When you talk to candidates as the professionals they are you get a whole new level up interaction and find out what you really need to know. Which only comes down to ONE thing: Will they work with your team and be a contributing member.
Agreed. Respect goes a long way.
Jeremy Falcon
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the best i could get is a one liner on the same idea as @raddevus.
data = [1, 9, 8, 4, 0, 0, 2, 7, 0, 6, 0];
for (var i = data.length - 2; i >= 0; i--) data.splice(i, !data[i]).length && data.push(0);
all thanks to JavaScript.
i could have never thought of the solution you found on the internet. it's brilliant.
let's C
int d[] = {1, 9, 8, 4, 0, 0, 2, 7, 0, 6, 0}, *s = d + sizeof d / sizeof *d;
for (int *c = d, *l = d; c < s; c++) if (*c) *l ? *l++ : (*l++ = *c) && (*c = 0);
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sickfile wrote: i could have never thought of the solution you found on the internet.
I honestly didn't find that on the Internet. I really did think of the code myself.
The key to getting to that answer was thinking about the fact that you really just needed:
1. the list of all the values >0
2. the same number of zeroes at the end of the list (which are contained in the array)
sickfile wrote: it's brilliant.
Youre one-liners are very interesting. JS does allow you to do some interesting things grammatically.
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I wanna be part of the cool club. I'd like to think I would've gotten it had I not been under pressure and cut short... maybe.
Can I be cool too, huh huh?
Jeremy Falcon
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You are definitely one of the Cool Club! You're in!
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Yay!
Jeremy Falcon
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Those are good solutions man.
Jeremy Falcon
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I agree 200%. I got so frustrated with interviews; I even got up and walked out on a couple because of the arbitrary-stretched-to-the-point-of-WTF who the hell has used one of those [insert obscure programming theory] in code in the last 20 years. The disgust has been so acrid that I started re-evaluating my career choices.
I got thrown into the deep end of a lot of projects and successfully swam out. No one in any interview asked about that.
I've given interviews and usually just by talking to the applicant inside of a few minutes can pretty quickly tell if the individual is a bullshit artist or not.
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mrmike wrote: I agree 200%. I got so frustrated with interviews; I even got up and walked out on a couple because of the arbitrary-stretched-to-the-point-of-WTF who the hell has used one of those [insert obscure programming theory] in code in the last 20 years. The disgust has been so acrid that I started re-evaluating my career choices.
Amen to that. I've dated a medical doctor in the past... and they never did anything like this to her. This is for doctors. So why is tech held to this standard? Maybe... maybe if it was for NASA... but for most LOB jobs. I mean really.mrmike wrote: I've given interviews and usually just by talking to the applicant inside of a few minutes can pretty quickly tell if the individual is a bullshit artist or not. Exactly. If you know what you're doing... all it takes is a chat IMO.
Jeremy Falcon
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kmoorevs wrote: .your solution provided the correct output but they passed on you anyway.
Pretty much.
kmoorevs wrote: I once believed that if my company ever failed that I could find another job easily. (21+ years of LOB apps for desktop and web) I thought that a resume with dozens of successful (still in use and still generating income) applications might be some strong evidence that I know what I'm doing. After all, programming is just about solving problems using the tools at hand...right?
It's sad, but in this field you have to study how to pass interviews... on top of what you already know. There so many people that interview well but suck at their actual job and vice versa.
kmoorevs wrote: we're expanding and very soon I'll likely be faced with hiring a jr. dev for some of the grunt work.
Glad to hear that man... especially considering the current issues of the world.
kmoorevs wrote: Welcome back Jeremy
Thanks.
Jeremy Falcon
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Any test that does not allow you to google the optimal answer to the specified problem is not a real world test and a flat waste of everybody's time. You should be allowed to google and rated on the answer you select from the search results. If you fail to google, you should be immediately disqualified.
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