I could pick up a cookbook and study how to cook a souffle. I could learn enough about this academically that I could answer basically any questions you might ask. Having this academic knowledge is a good thing, but it doesn't mean I've ever even separated an egg. If you really want to know if I can make a souffle, your best bet is to hand me the stuff and ask me to do it.
> Here I disagree. If you have never used a framework or API, you don't know it. I don't care that you can regurgitate the Javadocs; I care that you know things like its pitfalls, quirks, and runtime oddities.
And here I assert that you're either probing on trivia or probing on things that can be learned without using the framework (actually, probably both). The pitfalls, quirks, and oddities are well documented in thousands of blogs.
> To be clear, I abhor trivia-based interviewing. What I am talking about is practical engineering tradeoffs between one course of action versus another, preferably supported by direct personal experience in the past.*
So this is an entirely different thing than pitfalls. Now you're talking about designing systems and dealing with tradeoffs. This isn't coding, and I don't believe you can always discover coding gaps by probing on this.
> Exposing the level of competence a five-minute coding problem can is trivial to do in parallel with a deep engineering discussion. In fact, I think some sort of code should be part of that discussion.
I guess I'm confused about what you're asking in an interview, then. Are your candidates coding or not?
> It should be something two-way, more representative of what the job is like on a daily basis.
I think it's unrealistic to try to get the candidate to solve real-world, day-to-day problems in an hour. This isn't what the job is like. "Design and implement this feature" is not a 45-minute task typically. It's typically days or weeks, so asking a "representative" problem in an interview is infeasible unless you're just doing high-level design, in which case it's not predictive for coding ability.