I just did the Pluralsight IQ test after seeing fellow chat members do it and reading the featured SO statements. The questions in the test I took (was JavaScript) were awful, some of them were downright incorrect and most were ambiguous. I think aligning the Stack Overflow brand (peer reviewed correctness that gets edited when it becomes irrelevant) with Pluralsight IQ (full of incorrect questions/answers) is a bad idea. I had a very negative user experience.
So basically:
- I'd like to see if I'm the only one who had such an experience or if this is commonplace?
- If there is any way that SO can approach Pluralsight directly about it and fix the tests?
Honestly I don't mind my score one bit (it wouldn't matter for job performance or hiring anyway) but I'm very concerned about the negative experience new programmers might have - we do a lot to be nice(ish) in Stack Overflow and I'm very dissatisfied with the user experience.
Here are some sample answers from my Pluralsight test, if anyone cares I can add more examples:
Which is wrong for at least a few years, and has been wrong even before (JavaScript had block scoping before ES2015 with with
and try/catch
).
Here is another example where the terminology isn't clear. It's not obvious whether or not null
is a part of the prototype chain and it's a bad question:
Formally - null is not a part of the prototype chain - quoting the spec:
Every object created by a constructor has an implicit reference (called the object’s prototype) to the value of its constructor’s “prototype” property. Furthermore, a prototype may have a non-null implicit reference to its prototype, and so on; this is called the prototype chain.
Now, eventually I started to figure out "what they were aiming for" and answered incorrect questions correctly (meaning incorrectly) which I think undermines the whole premise.