- What industry sites and blogs do you read regularly?
This question can give you an idea of how in-tune they are with the latest industry trends and technologies, as well as how passionate they are about webdev. It’ll help separate the people who do it as a career AS WELL as a hobby for those who might simply be in it for the big developer paychecks.
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- Do you prefer to work alone or on a team?
This is an important question to ask depending on the work environment. If your project is going to require close interaction with other developers it’s very handy to have someone who has had that kind of experience. On the other hand, many developers thrive while going solo. Try to find a developer that fits your needs.
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- How comfortable are you with writing HTML entirely by hand? (+exercise)
Although their resume may state that they’re an HTML expert, often times many developers can’t actually write an HTML document from top to bottom. They rely on an external publisher or have to constantly flip back to a reference manual. Any developer worth a damn should at least be able to write a simple HTML document without relying on external resources. A possible exercise is to draw up a fake website and ask them to write the HTML for it. Keep it simple and just make sure they have the basics down – watch for mistakes like forgetting the <head> </head> tags or serious misuse of certain elements. If they write something like: <image src=”/some/image.gif”>, it might be a good hint to wrap things up and call the next interviewee.
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- What is the w3c?
Standards compliance in web development is where everything is (hopefully?) going. Don’t ask them to recite the w3c’s mission statement or anything, but they should at least have a general idea of who they are.
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- Can you write table-less XHTML? Do you validate your code?
Weed out the old-school table-driven design junkies! Find a developer who uses HTML elements for what they were actually intended. Also, many developers will say they can go table-less, but when actually building sites, they still use tables out of habit and/or convenience. Possibly draw up a quick navigation menu or article and have them write the markup for it. To be tricky, you could draw up tabular data – give them bonus points if they point out that a table should be used in that scenario 🙂
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- What are a few of your favorite development tools and why?
If they say notepad you’ve obviously got the wrong person for the job. Not only can this help you gauge their level of competence, but it’ll also see if they match the tools everyone else uses in-house.
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- Describe/demonstrate your level of competence in a *nix shell environment
See how well they work without their precious GUI. Ask some basic questions like how they would recursively copy a directory from one place to another, or how you’d make a file only readable by the owner. Find out what OSs they have experience with.
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- What skills and technologies are you the most interested in improving upon or learning?
Find out if their future interests match the direction of the position (or the company in general).
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- Show me your portfolio!
A portfolio can say a lot about a developer. Do they have an eye for aesthetics? Are they more creatively or logically oriented? The most important thing is to look for being solid, extensible, COMPLETED projects. A half dozen mock-ups and/or hacked-out scripts is a sign of inexperience or incompetence.
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- What sized websites have you worked on in the past?
Find a developer that has experience similar in size to the project you’re putting together. Developers with high traffic, large scale site expertise may offer skills that smaller-sized developers don’t, such as fine tuning apache or optimizing heavily hit SQL queries. On the other hand, developers who typically build smaller sites may have an eye for things that large scale developers don’t, such as offering a greater level of visual creativity.
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- Show me your code!
Whether it’s plain old HTML or freakishly advanced ruby on rails, ask for code samples. Source code can say more about a persons work habits than you think. Clean, elegant code can often be indicative of a methodical, capable developer. A resume may say 7+ years of perl experience, but that could mean 7 years of bad, unreadable perl. Also, make sure you ask for a lot of source code, not just a few isolated functions or pieces of HTML. Anyone can clean up 20-30 lines of code for an interview, you want to see the whole shebang. Don’t ask for a full, functional app, but make sure it’s enough that you can tell it’s really what their code is like.
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- What are a few sites you admire and why? (from a webdev perspective)
Find out what inspires them. While it doesn’t necessarily “take one to know one,” a great developer should always have a few impressive favorites.
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- Fix this code, please.
Give them some broken code written in the development language they are expected to know for the position. Have them go through it line by line and point out all the mistakes.
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- I just pulled up the website you built and the browser is displaying a blank page. Walk me through the steps you’d take to troubleshoot the problem.
This is a great question to determine how well rounded their abilites are. It tests everything from basic support skills all the way up to troubleshooting the webserver itself.
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- What’s your favorite development language and why? What other features (if any) do you wish you could add to this language?
Asking about feature additions is a particularly valuable question – it can reveal if they’re skilled in programming in general or if their skillset is pigeonholed into their language of choice.
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- Do you find any particular languages or technologies intimidating?
I’ve often felt that the more I learn, the less I feel like I know. Solving one mystery opens up ten others. Having the interviewee tell you their faults can reveal a lot about what they know.
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- Acronym time (oh boy!)
Some might argue that knowing what acronyms actually stand for is trivial, but there are certain acronyms that a developer should have hard-wired into their head ( HTML or CSS, for example). This is the kind of question that might be better reserved for the phone interview to weed out those who are very unqualified.
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- What web browser do you use?
There is a right answer to this question: all of them. A competent developer should be familiar with testing cross-browser compatibility by using all the major web browsers. Obviously they’ll have a primary browser they use for surfing, but their answer to this question might be a good way for you to segue to asking how extensively they test cross-browser issues. Also, if it’s some kind of css/html position seeing what toolbars they have installed can be a good metric of their skillset (I personally find the web developer toolbar for firefox to be invaluable)
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- Rank your interest in these development tasks from 1 to 5 (1 being not interested at all, 5 being extremely interested) Write up a list of tasks the job requires. Having them rank these items according to their interest level can help you find who is the best suited for the position. I know debugging uncommented perl code from 1997 sounds seriously awesome to me.
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- What are a few personal web projects you’ve got going on?
Almost all developers have personal web projects they like to plug away at in their spare time. This is another question that can help differentiate the passionate developers from the clock-punchers. It’s also a good question to end an interview with, as it’s usually easy (and fun) for them to answer.
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