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by scarmig 3027 days ago
Questions are often under specified for exactly this reason: to test ability to ask questions when necessary.

Even if the problem is fully specified, asking clarifying questions is considered a good signal in any interview I've ever conducted.

1 comments

> Questions are often under specified for exactly this reason: to test ability to ask questions when necessary.

Unless you deviate from the script the [incompetent] interviewer expect, in which case, you are toasted.

If you can't make yourself understood to the average engineer at a company, I think it's fair to say there's not a good fit between you and the company.
s/engineers/managers/... Who probably ended up there to limit their collateral damage to the company, ie. followed the Peter principle.
I'd say that if you're in a technical interview with a non-technical manager, you may've chosen the wrong company to interview with. And if it's a non-technical portion of the interview and you have trouble making yourself understood (to a manager), you're back to the "it's not a good fit" conclusion.
It was definitively the "technical interview with a non-technical manager", and yes, I do agree with you, but it's difficult to judge companies beforehand.
Fair enough; unfortunate that they put you in that situation.