| >Interviewers are expecting the actual exact answer with syntax correctness instead of looking at thought process. Are you talking about this specific case or in general? I've sat in on several interviews where someone's been asked to write something up on a board, and we were definitely not looking for 100% correctness. >Also when you do whiteboard u look for view of audience and in interview it is not the case Why not? An interview isn't an exam. It's a chance for both parties to find out if they could, and would want to, work together. I expect them to be two way conversations. I were being interviewed I'd quite happily say things like "At this point, I'd be looking to put caching in. I've used X for this in the past, but does your company have a prefered solution for it?". When I'm sitting in on interviews it's a positive if someone asks me that kind of question. >Why would interviewers not ask if the candidate is comfortable with whiteboard or a simple paper based or even a oral? If you're looking for someone who is good at talking other people through their solution, then you want to see them doing it. I've no idea on what this company was actually looking for, but I wouldn't want a technical lead who couldn't grab a pen and draw up their thinking. |
> An interview isn't an exam
That's not everyone's experience. Some interviewers do look for correctness, and an interview can be far more stressful than an exam, especially for people who are desperate for employment or just introverted.
The point is that whatever the whiteboard tests, it's definitely not someone's ability to sit on a computer and write good code all day.