[nycphp-talk] Questions to ask at a job interview?
P. Ju (朱漢璇)
pjlists at pobox.com
Sun Jul 8 21:46:46 EDT 2007
Hello all,
I'm new to this list but not to PHP. I've been architecting and
developing Web applications and networked software products for about
17 years and have had the good fortune to work for some very
interesting clients such as Nike, BMG Direct, the Chicago Tribune,
Lycos, &c.
I've also conducted programming skill assessments which resulted in
stronger candidate matches for fast paced projects. However, I've also
interviewed candidates whom I thought were weak technically and poor
choices, but with whom the hiring manager had long-term relationships.
Guess what? Those candidates worked hard, got up to speed, and ended
up being valuable long term investments!
I agree with Urb in that I'd much rather see a third variable for the
value-swapping question than the "xor" which obfuscates the code. Only
in extreme resource duress (embedded systems, PDAs, watch PCs :) would
I resort to obfuscation for optimization, and when I do I always feel
a slight pang of guilt.
Thanks for this resource, and I hope to meet you all when I re-move to
NYC (grew up there, left a decade ago) in July/August!
Regards,
Patricia Ju
> > Message: 6
> > Date: Sat, 07 Jul 2007 23:25:58 -0400
> > From: Urb LeJeune <urb at e-government.com>
> > Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] Questions to ask at a job interview?
> > To: NYPHP Talk <talk at lists.nyphp.org>
> > Message-ID: <7.0.1.0.2.20070707230749.028b1810 at e-government.com>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
> >
> > I've been following this thread with interest. To a certain point I think
> > you're going about this in the wrong way. Programming is about
> > problem solving, it's about syntax, that's the easy part. I good
> > problem solver can use a book to lean the syntax to code a solved
> > problem. Someone who aces a programming test because they
> > have memorized a manual is non necessarily a good problem
> > solver.
> >
> > Try this on a candidate.
> >
> > Write an algorithm (not language specific code) to do the following:
> >
> > Players is a variable holding the number of players in a single
> > elimination tournament. If you loose a match, you're out. The
> > winner is determined when there is no one left to play.
> >
> > Output the value of Matches which is a variable containing the
> > number of matches required in the tournament.
> >
> > On problem that is non-trivial will have multiple solutions, we
> > want the most efficient.
> >
> > Resist the temptation to express the algorithm in PHP or any
> > other programming language.
> >
> > The algorithm is like:
> >
> > 1. Input Players as the number of players in a single elimination tournament.
> > ...
> > ...
> > X. Output Matches which is the number of matches required in a single
> > elimination tournament containing N (Players) players
> >
> > Hire any candidates who come up with an elegant solution. Then teach
> > them any syntactic structures they don't know.
> >
> > BTW, I personally think swapping the contents of two variables without a
> > temporary variables proves nothing. It's a trick we learned if we studied
> > assembly language. Tricks do not a good programmer make. When is
> > the last time you used an XOR is a real program?
> >
> > Urb
> >
> > Dr. Urban A. LeJeune, President
> > E-Government.com
> > 800-204-9545
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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> > talk at lists.nyphp.org
> > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
> >
> > End of talk Digest, Vol 9, Issue 10
> > ***********************************
> >
>
>
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>
> 失敗是成功之母
> Failure is the mother of success.
>
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US/Int'l Cell: +1.503.616.3100
失敗是成功之母
Failure is the mother of success.
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