So, I'm stalking Jon Skeet -- via the data dump, that is.

After wading through the dump looking for interesting patterns, the graph below popped out as worthy. It's a bit complex to think about, so let me explain it a bit via bullet points:

  • Query that data dump for number of questions Jon Skeet answered for each tag
  • Filter to top 12, or roughly > ~80 answers total for that tag
  • Graph each tag, by month, as a percentage of the total for the top dozen tags (and not all tags Skeet answered questions for)
  • There is overlap: a single question with c# and .net will show up as two counts. E.g.: The total of answers-per-tag exceeds the number of answers Skeet has actually written.

As we can see, the top three tags, by a large margin, are .net, c# and java. Both c# and .net have a negative slope, and java has a positive slope. Additionally, java has moved from his #3 most popular tag to answer to #2. So, the question is:

Is Jon Skeet slowly switching his attention from .NET to Java?

Top Dozen Tags of Answers as a Percentage of Top Dozen Answers by Month

Stack Overflow: Stalking Jon Skeet -Top Dozen Tags of Answers as a Percentage of Top Dozen Answers by Month


Update: Jon Skeet says...

It would be interesting to see the graphs as a proportion of all questions with those tags over the same time period, to account for (say) a new set of Java programmers who might deluge the site with questions.

So, I whipped up some another graph. Again, it is complicated, and here are the bullet points:

  • Query that data dump for number of questions Jon Skeet answered for the tags java, 'c#, and.net` from October on. (In September, Skeet had just joined and answered a mere 10% his norm.)
  • Query that data dump for tag count on questions with java, 'c#.net` tags
  • Graph each tag, by month, as a percentage of the total for these three tags (and not the total tags for Skeet's answers or all questions)
  • Again, there is overlap: a single question with tags c# and .net will show up as two counts. E.g.: The total of answers-per-tag exceeds the number of answers Skeet has actually written.

Jon Skeet Top 3 tags percent answers by month vs all questions

Interesting. It seems that Skeet's interest shifts quite closely where the community interest is going, more or less. Also, it seems he answers a lower percentage of all Java questions relative to C# questions, which is no surprise, but that gap is shrinking.

Eric says...

Also, it's funny that C# actually went up in the past month, but .NET went down. Maybe we're finally starting to not tag every C# question with .NET, too.

I think he's probably correct as tag .net is ~1/3rd down (relatively in this context).

share|improve this question
16  
Are you afraid of this, because Java is your favourite tag? ;-) – Ladybug Killer Aug 4 '09 at 11:27
1  
The opposite: I'd rather rub shoulders with folks smarter than myself, and learn something. – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 11:36
6  
I can smell you from a mile away, Brutus. – TheTXI Aug 4 '09 at 11:37
10  
Everyone knows .NET is a derivative of JVM, so Jon is just taking a step backward to gain a better understanding of .NET from the ground up. Commendable if you ask me. – XMLbog Aug 4 '09 at 11:39
2  
@Pesto: so....that is what folks are talking about when they mention trivial edits...thanks for clarifying that for me... – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 11:40
5  
You've now become the paparazzi of StackOverflow. – devinb Aug 4 '09 at 12:36
@devinb: nah...I actually asked permission. It would be best if Skeet didn't punch me in the face and do a stink in the pokie for assault. I've been curious about what could be extracted about an individual SOpedian from the data dump, but find the actual task a bit creepy. More to come... – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 13:01
not-stackoverflow-related – jmfsg Aug 4 '09 at 13:38
Has anyone noticed the downward trend of productivity compared with the upward trend of pointless stats? – Jeff Yates Aug 4 '09 at 14:02
5  
No. But that's because my productivity has always been at a steady 0 – TheTXI Aug 4 '09 at 14:04
1  
It's all about maintaining that balance. – Jeff Yates Aug 4 '09 at 14:11
The problem with a percentage scale is that you're not monitoring the gross contribution, only the relative. It would be much more useful to see his activity by volume, not percentage. – Ian Elliott Aug 6 '09 at 3:17
Well, it doesn't look like his C# questions have dropped, I think people are just tagging .Net less! I have created many questions in c#, but, I hardly ever (if at all) tag with .net. – William Hilsum Nov 6 '11 at 9:26
Clearly he was just trying to foster a little healthy competition between the java and c# tags. – Asad Feb 20 at 7:09
form now jon take 500 Reputation Per day .... – Jeson Park Apr 1 at 17:20

closed as not constructive by Tim Post Nov 5 '11 at 0:30

As it currently stands, this question is not a good fit for our Q&A format. We expect answers to be supported by facts, references, or specific expertise, but this question will likely solicit debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. If you feel that this question can be improved and possibly reopened, see the FAQ for guidance.

9 Answers

up vote 37 down vote accepted

If there are any trends at all, they're certainly not conscious on my part.

It would be interesting to see the graphs as a proportion of all questions with those tags over the same time period, to account for (say) a new set of Java programmers who might deluge the site with questions.

In terms of my daily activities, I spend 80% of my time doing Java (working on Google Sync over the ActiveSync protocol, mostly working on calendar) and 20% doing C# stuff (currently porting the Wave Robot API to .NET). However, I'm also spending time revising my C# book for its second edition, so I probably spend about as much time thinking in each language.

Oh, one final though: you have too much time on your hands.

share|improve this answer
33  
Moi? And this from the man with over 4700 finely crafted posts on SO! – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 19:26
2  
I take it .NET support for app engine is coming down the pipe, then? ;) – bdonlan Aug 4 '09 at 19:29
1  
And 6600 comments. And 3500 Votes. :) – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 19:31
I've added the graph you suggested... – Stu Thompson Aug 5 '09 at 10:27
4  
Too much time, eh? Pot, kettle? – Norman Ramsey Jan 7 '10 at 16:15
@Norman: I wish I had too much time. Then I could spend more time on Noda Time, MoreLINQ, MiniBench, Protocol Buffers, Wave robots etc... – Jon Skeet Jan 7 '10 at 16:39
@jon: it would be interesting to know how much Google pay SeniorSeniorSenior developers like you. I am aware anyway you will not/cannot tell us :) – yes123 Jun 2 '11 at 23:41
@yes123: I can't tell you, I'm afraid. But I will say that I'm actually not a senior developer at Google... – Jon Skeet Jun 3 '11 at 6:10
@jon: no problem I knew you couldn't tell. Anyway I really hope they reward poeple like you paying a lot of money. Did you read this horrible news ? computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/careers/… – yes123 Jun 3 '11 at 23:52

Perhaps he's been into "the room" at Google and been re-conditioned:

Clockwork orange

share|improve this answer

Perhaps Jon Skeet has hit critical mass of .NET questions and it has come to the point where all new questions can simply be referred back towards old answers.

Either that or Jon Skeet is learning.

I suggest we put him down. You know. Just in case. Right?

share|improve this answer

I remember Jon Skeet saying at one point that he used to do a lot of .NET stuff, but he now works for Google doing Java. As he gets more used to Java due to using it at work, I would expect him to answer more Java questions and less .NET questions.

share|improve this answer
1  
It's possible to be more used to Java than Jon Skeet is?? – mmyers Aug 4 '09 at 14:36
You should see the discussions on our internal Java mailing lists. A lot of it goes way over my head. – Jon Skeet Aug 4 '09 at 19:11
2  
Stop it, you're making me curious! – mmyers Aug 4 '09 at 19:14

If you take out the September 2008 outlier, C# is a slightly positive slope. That's skewing results a bit.

Also, it's funny that C# actually went up in the past month, but .NET went down. Maybe we're finally starting to not tag every C# question with .NET, too. Woohoo! Obviously, though, he is answering more and more Java questions, so good on him.

share|improve this answer
Agreed. And his September vote count is actually fairly low for Sept 2008 which weakens the relevance of the data for then. The tag overlap makes it all very fuzzy... – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 21:20

To expand on what Jon said...

you have WAY too much time on your hands


Let me explain myself a bit on this one....

This is your question:

Is Jon Skeet slowly switching his attention from .net to Java?

The data actually says the following:

Between the months of May and July of 2009, Jon answered roughly 2% more Java questions in July than May and about 5% less .NET questions over the same period. However, it should be noted that C# is a .NET programming language and Jon exhibited roughly a 6% increase on that topic over the same period. This equates to roughly a 1% difference which is well under the standard month over month variance in percentages that Jon has displayed. Because the increase is well within the margin of error, we cannot say HE IS and we cannot say HE IS NOT, but we can say THE DATA DOES NOT PROVE ANYTHING.

share|improve this answer
This is not Fox News: The question is not a disguised statement. Too much time? Really? Feel free to elaborate. – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 21:25
1  
Clearly the data does not say he is or isn't. 1% is well within the margin of error and your question has an easy answer. Yet you had the question to begin with and the graph? So yes, way too much time. Furthermore, don't make lame attempts a calling out media outlets on their own as they are ALL bad. MSNBC? – RSolberg Aug 4 '09 at 21:30
1  
Speaking about too much time on someone's hands...pot...kettle? – Paul Nathan Aug 4 '09 at 21:33
1  
@Paul: 20 seconds is quite a bit less than hours of data analysis and graph creation. – RSolberg Aug 4 '09 at 21:35
You claim to have spent only 20 seconds on your answer? I don't believe you. You focus on the last 3 months of data, rather than the entire 11 in the graph? The term 'Intellectually Dishonest' comes to mind. You significantly changed the content of your answer 10 minutes ago? One word comes to mind: "Fraud" – Stu Thompson Aug 4 '09 at 22:02
1  
@Stu: "Fraud"? That is a pretty strong word. I did not Significantly change the content of my answer. I basically expanded to include reasoning for why you cannot say HE IS because you cannot say anything at all over what the recent data would suggest. Looking at 3 of 12 months is 25% of data and for most people is a very large sample size. The onlything that lacks intellect is you my friend... – RSolberg Aug 5 '09 at 0:43

For .NET he has already generated all text blocks to compose answers automatically. Now he is searching new challenges.

share|improve this answer

Perhaps he finished answering all the C# questions and is working his way through all the tags.

share|improve this answer

While his "day job" is programming in Java, Jon is a C# developer at heart.

Jon Skeet on C# 3.0 - .NET Rocks!
http://www.dotnetrocks.com/default.aspx?showNum=383

share|improve this answer

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged