Computer Association of SIUE - Forums

CAOS Forums => News and Commentary => Topic started by: Peter Motyka on 2002-08-23T00:55:44-05:00 (Friday)

Title: Ask Slashdot: How Should You Interview a Programmer?
Post by: Peter Motyka on 2002-08-23T00:55:44-05:00 (Friday)
"Having hired several programmers who haven't worked out, I'm wondering if other people have better success with interviewing techniques. Usually we have a two 'technical interviews' and a final interview. The technical interviews tend to be a combination of specific technical questions ('Is friendship inherited? How would you find out?') and algorithmic ('Given the numbers from 1-10 missing one number, how do you find the missing number?'). In addition, we essentially try to interview for: intelligence/performance. technical skills (algorithmic, etc.), and team compatibility. Unfortunately, we've been burned a couple of times by people whose performance didn't measure up to what we expected from the interviews. So I'm wondering if other people wanted to share their interviewing tricks - how do you find out if someone is a good programmer?" Surprisingly enough, we've done a series of these, so if you are interested in similar questions for sysadmins, network engineers, or the one who will follow in your footsteps, then we've got it covered. We've also covered core IT questions as well. What special ways do you have of evaluating potential coders? How well have they worked out?

http://ask.slashdot.org/askslashdot/02/08/21/1759242.shtml?tid=129 (http://ask.slashdot.org/askslashdot/02/08/21/1759242.shtml?tid=129)