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No, not all companies use them, but those who do (in my experience) struggle to hire because they put too much stock in what they do or do not reveal.
I have one experience where the interviewer clearly revelled in his position of knowing the answer and holding it over me. This was stage 5 of the interviews. I had already proven myself capable in many ways, but he enjoyed watching me squirm by continually making the puzzle more complex. I eventually gave up - I had already decided I didn't want to work there because of what I had seen that day about individuals and attitude. -
Instead of silly problems, give them real world problems like @Letmecode said. For example...
You're locked in a room and there is a small hand-sized hole in the wall next to the door with dried blood around it. Also, the room is slowly filling with water. You're goal is to escape. -
Ok, maybe that was over the top. This is what happens when I only get 3 hours of sleep.
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@Letmecode it's simple really. There is a button in the hole that opens the door. But if you push it, a blade drops and severs your hand. So you use your shoe to push the button and escape.
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@chiragiem36 There was a frontend html/css related job for which we were required to take a codility test. I mean how does solving a fucking math problem show my ability to write html/css?
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@MissDirection But that's more about lateral thinking than actually solving a real problem. I'd hate that in an interview. By all means, ask me something a bit left field that I'll have to break down and solve piece by piece. But logic puzzles are not, in my view, the right tool.
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@CrankyOldDev oh I agree, but I think if you are going for a Dev job and locked you in a room that started filling with water, well, that would be crazy lol
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Gnonpi7877yI had interviews where the company gave me piece of anonymised data and asked to do stuff with it, I think it's the best way to really test the skills of a candidate
Do all companies ask candidates to solve some crazy puzzles before interviewing them? These puzzles have nothing to do with the job!
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