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Yes - some people like me gain intelligence slowly with age
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The biggest head scratch I've had in years was in a practical assessment, where question spoke about an "Astronauts" database, which I dutifully built a connection string for, and then panicked because my old school ADO.NET (this was a requirement) code didn't work. I hadn't worked with SqlConnection and SqlCommand for a few years. Then, in a flash of inspiration, I somehow found the database to actually have a singular name, i.e. "Astronaut", and it worked.
Other than that, I don't recall anything really challenging for a really long time. I'm not lauding my abilities here, just commenting on interview and assessment questions.
No object is so beautiful that, under certain conditions, it will not look ugly. - Oscar Wilde
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Then they asked the wrong questions.
I would have asked you...
If you light a candle in the space station, with plenty of oxygen,
will it burn normally or go out? Explain?
(For clarification, the space station is in orbit, and it has NOTHING
to do with the space station extinguishing fires!)
For me, the point of asking the question is to determine how someone
approaches a complex problem for which they cannot be expected to know the answer.
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Kirk 10389821 wrote: If you light a candle in the space station, with plenty of oxygen,
will it burn normally or go out? Explain? is it an oxygen generating candle[^]?
No object is so beautiful that, under certain conditions, it will not look ugly. - Oscar Wilde
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You are the weakest link...
Goodbye
And No. Plenty of oxygen. Regular Candle.
But you get the point of the question.
Actually, in an interview (not using Google), if you could have referenced something like that, I would give you a bonus point for EXCESSIVE reading and good recall.
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Even if it burns normally it will still go out eventually.
Plus, I've seen plenty of candles burning normally on Star Trek.
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Nope.
It will extinguish itself.
As the wax melts, the lack of gravity in space does not pull the
wax away (Gravity helps to pull the wet wax down the candle, and it
also provides the rising heat requirements for the flame, which produces
a convection current, drawing fresh air in to the bottom).
Without the gravity, the capillary action of the wick rules the roost,
and it would draw the wax up the wick, extinguishing the flame.
Yes, and with regards to the Star Trek episode. they were NOT on the space station.
And I am not sure how far we are away from artificial gravity.
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They asked me.. If you are travelling from India to USA with stop over in Frankfurt and at the same time your friend will travel in opossite direction from USA to India with stopover in Frankfurt. In which part of the world will you meet during the travel or will be just 50 KM apart.
Please give the best possible answer . I was little confused but finally answered. This was a icebreaker question.
cheers,
Super
Too much of good is bad,mix some evil in it
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if you're both laying over in Frankfurt, won't you meet in Frankfurt???
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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Yes. Thats the answer I gave. I told them that with the available information provided,Frankfurt is the most easy way to meet.
cheers,
Super
Too much of good is bad,mix some evil in it
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GitHub flavoured markdown, with the biggest change being you use ``` to start codeblocks
and the usual italics. bold and code (use *, ** and `` respectively). An addition is strike, which uses --.
You can also
If you're old school.
An important note is that to add a linebreak you'll need to either
add 2 spaces to the end of a line, or add a blank line between lines.
You may want to update your signatures if you leave the "Use Markdown formatting" button checked.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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COOL!
Me like!
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
The metaphorical solid rear-end expulsions have impacted the metaphorical motorized bladed rotating air movement mechanism.
Do questions with multiple question marks annoy you???
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Would it be too much to ask for an alternative to ` ? It's a PITA on my (german) keyboard layout..
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Yeah - easy. What would you like?
cheers
Chris Maunder
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In order of preference: # ~ °
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They're just as bad for me with my Swedish keyboard. I'd prefer ´ or ¨
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What about ' or _ ?
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' is a quote, _ is emphasis, ? is too commonly used.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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´ might actually work.
Sascha?
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Wouldn't be optimal but better than backticks. If you like it best from the mentioned options, go for it
Is there a doc for the other formatting options you mentioned?
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Done. And yes[^].
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Thanks, Chris!
cheers, Sascha
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# is for tables, ~ is for strike through in some dialects, and ° - well, I can't even type that on my keyboard! (So hey - why not?)
I'll add °° as the code delimiter for code.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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