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Job Application Test from Hell

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  • P Pete OHanlon

    Well, one way to do this would be to do something along the lines of:

    SELECT Region, Contact FROM WhatACrappyTest
    ORDER BY SUBSTRING(Region,2,1) DESC, Contact ASC

    This works based on the fact that the second character is ordered descending, and the contact orders ascending. This even takes the fact that your have CapeTown and Cape Town in the Region column. Obviously, the interviewer should be challenged on the validity of this question.

    I have CDO, it's OCD with the letters in the right order; just as they ruddy well should be

    Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

    My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Onyx

    P Offline
    P Offline
    PIEBALDconsult
    wrote on last edited by
    #33

    Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

    even takes the fact that your have CapeTown and Cape Town

    Have you tested that?

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    • P PIEBALDconsult

      Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

      even takes the fact that your have CapeTown and Cape Town

      Have you tested that?

      A Offline
      A Offline
      AspDotNetDev
      wrote on last edited by
      #34

      He's only looking at the second character. In the case of "CapeTown", that'd be "a". In the case of "Cape Town", that'd be "a". What's there to test?

      [Forum Guidelines]

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • P PIEBALDconsult

        Sure, but which one? Fred or Joe? I performed some data cleanup, so sue me. :-D (Now lets see if it stays where it's supposed to be.) :mad:

        A Offline
        A Offline
        AspDotNetDev
        wrote on last edited by
        #35

        PIEBALDconsult wrote:

        Sure, but which one? Fred or Joe?

        I hadn't noticed that.

        [Forum Guidelines]

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • P PIEBALDconsult

          Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

          even takes the fact that your have CapeTown and Cape Town

          Have you tested that?

          A Offline
          A Offline
          AspDotNetDev
          wrote on last edited by
          #36

          With your above observation that "CapeTown" is first attached to Joe and then to Fred, your message makes more sense. I think I like this interview question... all kinds of details to help root out those who don't pay very good attention (I am apparently one of them). :)

          [Forum Guidelines]

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • C Chris Meech

            The only obvious ordering sequence is the number of capitalized letters in Region, followed by the Region, followed by the Contact. :)

            Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. [Yogi Berra] posting about Crystal Reports here is like discussing gay marriage on a catholic church’s website.[Nishant Sivakumar]

            P Offline
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            PIEBALDconsult
            wrote on last edited by
            #37

            And the number of characters in an entry.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • B Brady Kelly

              I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

              Region

              Contact

              Cape Town

              Fred

              CapeTown

              Joe

              Cape Town

              Anna

              Durban

              John

              Durban

              Mary

              Johannesburg

              Frank

              Fig. 2

              Region

              Contact

              Durban

              John

              Durban

              Mary

              Johannesburg

              Frank

              Cape Town

              Anna

              CapeTown

              Fred

              Cape Town

              Joe

              N Offline
              N Offline
              NickHighIQ
              wrote on last edited by
              #38

              First thing's first, the order. It appears to be grouped by Region, the groups are ordered by MIN(Contact) (assuming MIN/MAX works in the way I expect, i.e. SELECT MAX('a', 'z') would return 'z' - never had to do an aggregate over varchar fields, thank GOD) and then ordered by Contact ascending. Thought process: Durban, JBurg, Cape Town - no obvious ordering there, but they're grouped... John, Mary - alphabetical Anna, Fred, Joe - alphabetical John, Frank, Anna - alphabetical (desc), so the earliest name in the alphabet in each region is used to order the regions... So, here's the SQL (SQL Server 2008):

              SELECT
              Region, Contact
              FROM
              TheStupidestTableEver
              ORDER BY
              MIN(Contact) OVER(PARTITION BY Region) desc, Contact

              Results:

              Region Contact

              Durban John
              Durban Mary
              Johannesburg Frank
              Cape Town Anna
              Cape Town Fred
              Cape Town Joe

              So, do I win a prize? ;P In fact, I don't need one, that was a satisfying problem to solve :-D

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • B Brady Kelly

                The ORDER BY clause is invalid in views, inline functions, derived tables, subqueries, and common table expressions, unless TOP or FOR XML is also specified. :) Here is mine, a little more general but very much the same:

                select first.*, 0 outerSeq from (select top(select COUNT(*) from Contacts) * from Contacts where Region >= 'Durban' order by Region, Contact) first
                union all
                select second.*, 1 outerSeq from (select top (select COUNT(*) from Contacts) * from Contacts where Region < 'Durban' order by Region, Contact) as second
                order by outerSeq

                S Offline
                S Offline
                Serguei
                wrote on last edited by
                #39

                SELECT Region, Contact
                FROM Fig1
                ORDER BY
                CASE Region WHEN 'Durban' THEN 1 ELSE 2 END,
                Contact

                Tip, you can do:

                SELECT TOP 100 PERCENT * FROM Fig1

                Even better tip: Don't do that - your query doesn't guarantee (although will more than likely result in) the correct ordering. You should have sorted by outerSeq, Contact in the outer query. See http://blogs.msdn.com/b/queryoptteam/archive/2006/03/24/560396.aspx

                B 1 Reply Last reply
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                • S Slacker007

                  SELECT * FROM YourTable ORDERBY Durban, Johannesburg, CapeTown INTHATORDER

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  Michael Kingsford Gray
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #40

                  Won't work. The middle "Cape Town" has the blank missing, and is "CapeTown" This makes it a very hard problem.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • S Serguei

                    SELECT Region, Contact
                    FROM Fig1
                    ORDER BY
                    CASE Region WHEN 'Durban' THEN 1 ELSE 2 END,
                    Contact

                    Tip, you can do:

                    SELECT TOP 100 PERCENT * FROM Fig1

                    Even better tip: Don't do that - your query doesn't guarantee (although will more than likely result in) the correct ordering. You should have sorted by outerSeq, Contact in the outer query. See http://blogs.msdn.com/b/queryoptteam/archive/2006/03/24/560396.aspx

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    Brady Kelly
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #41

                    Thanks, I especially like the top 100 percent

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • B Brady Kelly

                      I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                      Region

                      Contact

                      Cape Town

                      Fred

                      CapeTown

                      Joe

                      Cape Town

                      Anna

                      Durban

                      John

                      Durban

                      Mary

                      Johannesburg

                      Frank

                      Fig. 2

                      Region

                      Contact

                      Durban

                      John

                      Durban

                      Mary

                      Johannesburg

                      Frank

                      Cape Town

                      Anna

                      CapeTown

                      Fred

                      Cape Town

                      Joe

                      A Offline
                      A Offline
                      altncsab
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #42

                      This is my solution. Because there was no pre-condition then anything is allowed :-D

                      declare @T_MyTable Table(Region varchar(200), Contact varchar(200))

                      select case when Contact = 'Fred' and Region like 'Cape%Town' then 'CapeTown'
                      when Region like 'Cape%Town' then 'Cape Town'
                      else Region end Region,
                      Contact
                      from @T_MyTable
                      order by substring(Region,2,1) desc, Contact

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • B Brady Kelly

                        I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                        Region

                        Contact

                        Cape Town

                        Fred

                        CapeTown

                        Joe

                        Cape Town

                        Anna

                        Durban

                        John

                        Durban

                        Mary

                        Johannesburg

                        Frank

                        Fig. 2

                        Region

                        Contact

                        Durban

                        John

                        Durban

                        Mary

                        Johannesburg

                        Frank

                        Cape Town

                        Anna

                        CapeTown

                        Fred

                        Cape Town

                        Joe

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        Simon_Duckett
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #43

                        SELECT [Region], [Contact] FROM Table1 ORDER BY SUBSTRING(REVERSE([Region]), 2, 1), [Contact]

                        J 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • B Brady Kelly

                          I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                          Region

                          Contact

                          Cape Town

                          Fred

                          CapeTown

                          Joe

                          Cape Town

                          Anna

                          Durban

                          John

                          Durban

                          Mary

                          Johannesburg

                          Frank

                          Fig. 2

                          Region

                          Contact

                          Durban

                          John

                          Durban

                          Mary

                          Johannesburg

                          Frank

                          Cape Town

                          Anna

                          CapeTown

                          Fred

                          Cape Town

                          Joe

                          K Offline
                          K Offline
                          KP Lee
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #44

                          This doesn't look like a question geared to testing your SQL skills, but your skill at defining "real" requirements from something that seems very silly at first. 1. Assume the person asking this, isn't a lune escaped from the asylum. 2. Try to find the underlying order that they are requesting. 3. ASK them what the underlying order is, suggesting a possibility. 4 ASK them the schema information you need in order to write the query. Sort of like: I see these regions are all in South Africa. I'm not that informed about that area, are you ordering this query by population? No? What is the order criteria you are using? Then find out if the criteria is in the table you are querying? Or they could be testing your knowledge of DB design and waiting for you to ask why the H the region and the name are stored in the same table in the first place. Failing all that, just answer the question. There are a bunch of ways to do it. You can throw in a case statement in a batch select and select the two fields and order by the case result, the union all solution would work, creating a temp table and joining with it is a third option.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • B Brady Kelly

                            I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                            Region

                            Contact

                            Cape Town

                            Fred

                            CapeTown

                            Joe

                            Cape Town

                            Anna

                            Durban

                            John

                            Durban

                            Mary

                            Johannesburg

                            Frank

                            Fig. 2

                            Region

                            Contact

                            Durban

                            John

                            Durban

                            Mary

                            Johannesburg

                            Frank

                            Cape Town

                            Anna

                            CapeTown

                            Fred

                            Cape Town

                            Joe

                            J Offline
                            J Offline
                            James H
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #45

                            SELECT Region, Contact FROM RegionTable ORDER BY SubString(Region,2,1) DESC, Contact ASC

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • S Simon_Duckett

                              SELECT [Region], [Contact] FROM Table1 ORDER BY SUBSTRING(REVERSE([Region]), 2, 1), [Contact]

                              J Offline
                              J Offline
                              James H
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #46

                              Ha - you beat me

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • B Brady Kelly

                                I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                                Region

                                Contact

                                Cape Town

                                Fred

                                CapeTown

                                Joe

                                Cape Town

                                Anna

                                Durban

                                John

                                Durban

                                Mary

                                Johannesburg

                                Frank

                                Fig. 2

                                Region

                                Contact

                                Durban

                                John

                                Durban

                                Mary

                                Johannesburg

                                Frank

                                Cape Town

                                Anna

                                CapeTown

                                Fred

                                Cape Town

                                Joe

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Mark_Wallace
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #47

                                It's a ridiculous question. If there's a reason for ordering as in ex.2, then there must be data that allows the order in that or another table (area code, telephone dialing code, or whatever). If such data isn't available, then the correct answer to the question would be to add a column for it. Otherwise, if it's just an arbitrary order for existing data, use an arbitrary solution -- the second letter of each location in reverse alphabetical order, for example -- then stuff it up the questioner's @rse.

                                I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

                                B 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • B Brady Kelly

                                  I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                                  Region

                                  Contact

                                  Cape Town

                                  Fred

                                  CapeTown

                                  Joe

                                  Cape Town

                                  Anna

                                  Durban

                                  John

                                  Durban

                                  Mary

                                  Johannesburg

                                  Frank

                                  Fig. 2

                                  Region

                                  Contact

                                  Durban

                                  John

                                  Durban

                                  Mary

                                  Johannesburg

                                  Frank

                                  Cape Town

                                  Anna

                                  CapeTown

                                  Fred

                                  Cape Town

                                  Joe

                                  P Offline
                                  P Offline
                                  PhilLeTaxi
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #48

                                  Hi, With this request,

                                  SELECT region, contact FROM `localisation` ORDER BY SUBSTRING(region,2,2) DESC, contact ASC

                                  I obtain :

                                  region contact
                                  Durban John
                                  Durban Mary
                                  Johannesburg Frank
                                  Cape Town Anna
                                  Cape Town Fred
                                  CapeTown Joe

                                  The list is ordered regarding the second letter of the region. To avoid the missing blank in CapeTown, the end of the string is cut. Bye

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • M Mark_Wallace

                                    It's a ridiculous question. If there's a reason for ordering as in ex.2, then there must be data that allows the order in that or another table (area code, telephone dialing code, or whatever). If such data isn't available, then the correct answer to the question would be to add a column for it. Otherwise, if it's just an arbitrary order for existing data, use an arbitrary solution -- the second letter of each location in reverse alphabetical order, for example -- then stuff it up the questioner's @rse.

                                    I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

                                    B Offline
                                    B Offline
                                    Brady Kelly
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #49

                                    It didn't strike me as that It's in order of Region, Contact asc, but it starts at the 2nd region, wrapping around to the first.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • B Brady Kelly

                                      I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                                      Region

                                      Contact

                                      Cape Town

                                      Fred

                                      CapeTown

                                      Joe

                                      Cape Town

                                      Anna

                                      Durban

                                      John

                                      Durban

                                      Mary

                                      Johannesburg

                                      Frank

                                      Fig. 2

                                      Region

                                      Contact

                                      Durban

                                      John

                                      Durban

                                      Mary

                                      Johannesburg

                                      Frank

                                      Cape Town

                                      Anna

                                      CapeTown

                                      Fred

                                      Cape Town

                                      Joe

                                      X Offline
                                      X Offline
                                      Xapp
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #50

                                      SELECT * FROM t ORDER BY SUBSTRING(REPLACE(Region, ' ', '') FROM 2) DESC, Contact ASC Tricky.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • B Brady Kelly

                                        I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                                        Region

                                        Contact

                                        Cape Town

                                        Fred

                                        CapeTown

                                        Joe

                                        Cape Town

                                        Anna

                                        Durban

                                        John

                                        Durban

                                        Mary

                                        Johannesburg

                                        Frank

                                        Fig. 2

                                        Region

                                        Contact

                                        Durban

                                        John

                                        Durban

                                        Mary

                                        Johannesburg

                                        Frank

                                        Cape Town

                                        Anna

                                        CapeTown

                                        Fred

                                        Cape Town

                                        Joe

                                        P Offline
                                        P Offline
                                        PhilLeTaxi
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #51

                                        Hi Again, Oups, I didn't see the response of James H. which has found the same solution. Sorry for the noise. Bye

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • B Brady Kelly

                                          I'm not looking for an answer here, I found my own, but this is quite a hard question. Given the table from Fig.1, write an SQL Select statement that would re-organize the results to look like Fig.2 Fig. 1

                                          Region

                                          Contact

                                          Cape Town

                                          Fred

                                          CapeTown

                                          Joe

                                          Cape Town

                                          Anna

                                          Durban

                                          John

                                          Durban

                                          Mary

                                          Johannesburg

                                          Frank

                                          Fig. 2

                                          Region

                                          Contact

                                          Durban

                                          John

                                          Durban

                                          Mary

                                          Johannesburg

                                          Frank

                                          Cape Town

                                          Anna

                                          CapeTown

                                          Fred

                                          Cape Town

                                          Joe

                                          N Offline
                                          N Offline
                                          Narud Shiro
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #52

                                          Guessing that we are using talking of SQL Server, and without using case when, union, or any other thing like them, this is my best: select Region, Contact from Contacts order by replace(Region, ' ', ''), Contact Can you give me a B+ at least, teacher?

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