47

I've had a look on the Site Analytics page. I displayed the full historical range, questions only, weekly. There is a pronounced yearly oscillation, spring being the most active season (and we can clearly observe why the Christmas hats were introduced).

My interest is elsewhere, however: the long-term trend. Here is the screenshot as described above, annotated by me with a trendline:

Time graph of weekly question volume 2008-today

A prominent feature comes out: steady growth just up to about mid-2014, then a marked slump. If we take care to compare the same week in different years (to eliminate the effect of the yearly oscillation), we can see that for the months of March and April (normally the busiest ones) there was an actual drop in question volume.

What would be a good explanation of this? On the bottom graph I looked at Visits for the same setup as above. It doesn't show the same slump, rather a steady decline in growth rate.

Time graph of weekly visits volume 2008-today

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  • 28
    I'm no data scientist but it would seem to me that at a certain point the volume of available answers would cut into new question volume/growth trends
    – charlietfl
    Sep 8, 2015 at 0:01
  • I do see a relatively large decrease in the amount of answers vs questions, around march / april '13 (Show q / a from 2012-today) Did any rules change around that time?
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 8, 2015 at 6:02
  • Eh, 2014 indeed.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 8, 2015 at 7:39
  • @charlietfl That should show a gradual effect, modulating the growth rate at all times. It shouldn't show any sudden threshold effects. Sep 8, 2015 at 7:46
  • 2
    Can you add a link or screenshot of the page you reference?
    – moooeeeep
    Sep 8, 2015 at 11:45
  • 1
    @moooeeeep That's a new privilege for 25k+ rep users (SO, 5k+ rep on beta sites iirc), so a link's not worth much to many users :) Sep 8, 2015 at 11:48
  • 1
    @MarkoTopolnik If the rate of development of technologies for which new answers are needed is slower than the rate at which those answers are provided on SE, it could certainly be a threshold effect. Imagine one million dedicated, all-knowing answerers. After the initial answering of everything, there would only be small bursts of activity whenever something new and confusing was invented.
    – sirdank
    Sep 8, 2015 at 12:29
  • @sirdank That's a very simplified model. Even accepting the premise there would be gradual decline as the problem space is explored from the general into the specific, into the esoteric. Fat tail distribution would apply. Sep 8, 2015 at 12:33
  • 2
    There have been prior musings about what exactly happened in late April of 2014 to cause the voting and posting patterns to change. Already covered well in this Q+A. Sep 8, 2015 at 13:04
  • 2
    The specific date and event is what matters of course, what you are asking about. You can surely connect the dots from there by using the graph. Sep 8, 2015 at 13:22
  • 1
    @HansPassant But I'm talking about an effect which is mostly pronounced in this year's March/April. Is your suggestion that the same effect has been persisting from spring 2014 onwards? There is BTW a clear sudden drop in answer volume at the date you mention, but not in questions. Sep 8, 2015 at 13:28
  • 1
    The trend line helps, thanks. (Even though it's clearly not freehand...) ;P Sep 8, 2015 at 17:30
  • 1
    @pnuts Any explanation of such a mechanical kind would require a stark, sudden drop at the day of rule change. This graph looks like the same rules were used to track volume at all times. Compare this with the answers curve, and even than one is not due to mechanical changes in accounting. Sep 8, 2015 at 17:35
  • 1
    @biziclop Sure thing, as evident from a quick visit to the [java] homepage :) Sep 9, 2015 at 13:44
  • 2
    It's not specified how exactly this data is generated. If it ignores deleted and/or closed questions, it could have something to do with all the attention the closing system has seen recently or perhaps changes to auto-deletion of questions. Sep 9, 2015 at 14:31

5 Answers 5

15

On the whole, I'd say that post growth rate is not so concerning if:

  1. Quality questions are answered quickly and correctly, and
  2. We aren't artificially limiting participation of programmers who have the ability, time and inclination to answer questions.

In fact, given the difficulties we've seen with floods of extremely poor questions, a bit of a break in growth might be welcome. I suspect that nearly every working programmer in the English-speaking world has visited Stack Overflow, so it's entirely possible we will hit a steady growth rate approximating the difference between new programmers entering the field and developers (such as myself) who move on to something else. Software continues to be a growth industry. It's just not growing as fast as Stack Overflow did in the first 5 year.

It's possible there's a natural limit to the number of questions that can be asked about a particular technology and we might be approaching that limit—especially on popular tags. If so, it will be difficult or impossible to ask new and unique questions. This is doubly true for people entering the discipline since everyone has the same sorts of problems when they first start with a language. Programmers who are able to ask new questions in Java, C# or PHP have gotten themselves into obscure corners and probably have more-than-typical experience. So post rate might even grow slower than programmer growth rate. (This is one of the reasons we are looking hard at other content types such as documentation.)

So let's go back to the two things that might be a concern. 2014 marked a turning point in answer rate:

2014 post types by week

The blue line is questions (including deleted ones) and the green line is answers. At the start of the year, the spread was around 25k more answers a week than questions. By the end of the year, with roughly the same number of questions, the spread had shrunk to ~10k. That's about the same rate we've seen so far this year. (For reasons unknown to me, there was a large spike in activity leading up to the week of April 19, 2015. Temporarily, the answer rate was restored to something like it's pre-2014 rate.)

Currently, Stack Overflow isn't in the worst shape when it comes to percent answered, but whether the cause is a bunch of unanswerable questions or answering fatigue or something else entirely, questions are getting fewer answers of late. All other things being equal, getting fewer answers is a concern.

As a quick aside, we delete unanswered and zero-scored questions after a year. While this removes mostly unanswerable junk, it does make our public stats (which ignore deleted posts) look better than reality. Looking at 0 score questions by week last year and excluding deleted posts, the "Uber-Tumbleweed" event horizon (one year ago) is pretty clear:

2014 posts by week

We can safely assume there aren't many hidden gems in this group. But if you crank the question score up to something more reasonable, like 2, the gap between answers and questions still shrunk in 2014. As a result, I'm concerned questions aren't getting the answers they deserve or at least not as many as in the past.


I'm also concerned that good programmers are discouraged from participating. We have some anecdotal evidence that experienced programmers who don't currently participate on Stack Overflow are intimidated by the process of getting started. This is one of the reasons I'm looking into a mentoring system. Talking to programmers who aren't active on the site we hear that it's really hard to ask questions that haven't already been asked and that the most commonly-encountered programming questions have already been well answered. So the old adage "write what you know" is generally poor advice on Stack Overflow.

There's a bit of a Catch 22: questions in less-frequented tags don't get as many good answers. I divided all first questions so far in 2015 (to avoid the automatic deletion mentioned above) into 4 more-or-less even bins by their primary tag's duplication rate:

          minimum     average           average average
          duplication question answered answer  answer  deleted closed
questions rate %      score    rate %   count   score   rate %  rate %
--------- ----------- -------- -------- ------- ------- ------- ------
   173686           3    -0.45     32.4    1.02    2.25    24.3   8.8
   209511           2    -0.22     31.8    1.03    1.95    20.2  13.0
   118739           1    -0.25     25.5    0.88    1.83    21.9   9.8
   160140           0    -0.18     17.6    0.62    1.48    23.3   7.8

As you can see, asking in tags with less duplication increases the odds that your question will do better in terms of voting. But your question is also much less likely to get answered and the answers are less likely to be upvoted. (Note that deletion and closure rates are probably uncorrelated to duplication close rate. It's likely tags with high duplication rates are correlated with active Mjölnir-wielding gold badge holders.[citation needed])

Unfortunately, a new user faces a difficult choice:

  1. Participate on popular tags where competition is fierce or
  2. Participate on quieter tags where contributions tend to be ignored.

In either case, the difficulty is getting sufficient reputation to fully contribute to the site. It's probably a natural (not artificial) outcome of how the site works. But that doesn't mean we should give up on helping potentially valuable new contributors get started.

4
  • In the first graph shown, there is a noted change in answers per question in April. This was when Mjolnir was released. If you adjust the graph to show answers to open questions then would it show the same ratio as before? It seems there is the strong possibility that as duplicate questions became quickly closed answers decreased because no one could post them on those questions. However, that doesn't mean that the solution was not found by the OP. In order to determine that questions which had no answer were answered, wouldn't it be more accurate to exclude that situation?
    – Travis J
    Sep 11, 2015 at 21:52
  • @TravisJ: The second chart shows only currently open questions. You can approximate the first graph in SEDE by looking at open questions with score > 0 or >1. Sep 11, 2015 at 22:07
  • Thanks for those links. Hm, just looking at the difference between 2014 with no close date versus 2014 with close date, the adjustment seems to be linear (as in the same across the board) with no specific inflection at the targeted time of aprilish, or around week 15. Perhaps mjolnir didn't have anything to do with this. Is there any way to determine what the result of the throttle ban process would have been as far as impact goes?
    – Travis J
    Sep 11, 2015 at 22:39
  • 1
    @Jon What would be your explanation of the regularity in the spread between Q and A volume? Intuitively it would be more logical that the ratio behaved like that. Why was the surplus of A over Q so stable even though the volume of Q was increasing? Sep 12, 2015 at 6:26
36

This question is of course entirely reasonable and interesting. However, I would like to start a digression about the phrasing of the title. "Is StackOverflow declining?" (emphasis mine) hints at an unspoken assumption that boundless growth is a need in and of itself; that a slowdown of growth is a problem, a sign of decline and that something must be done about it. But is that really the case? Wouldn't a decline actually consist of the loss of our ability to produce quality content that is useful to virtually all programmers?

I don't mean to suggest growth isn't important; that would be naive. However, naturalising the importance of growth leads to bad decisions, especially when there is a community involved. Questions like the one in the title make me anxious because they remind me of another community I love: Wikipedia, whose backers (i.e. the Wikimedia nonprofit, itself very worthy of respect) are lost at sea, sinking enormous amounts of effort and community goodwill in futile measures to address a supposed issue of growth.

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  • 1
    The kind of "importance of growth" thinking tends to get publicly-traded businesses in trouble too... Sep 9, 2015 at 10:53
  • 1
    I agree with you @duplode, decline of questions on SO would also mean that most the bad quality questions are being moderated efficiently or the open questions are being closed very quickly with good quality of answers/solutions. Sep 9, 2015 at 13:18
  • 2
    @MarkoTopolnik I'm not dismissing worrying conclusions, but merely warning about hasty worrying conclusions. I'm sorry you took this answer as strawan-making, that was not my intention. I did really mean it when I said above that your question was "entirely reasonable and interesting", or that suggesting that growth isn't important "would be naive". That's why I explicitly framed my answer as "a digression about the phrasing of the title", and left it to others to discuss the data you gathered.
    – duplode
    Sep 9, 2015 at 17:00
  • 2
    @MarkoTopolnik Shallow interpretations don't need to be dignified (by myself or anyone else); too many people will jump at them anyway. I never claimed my answer presented the whole truth; it is obviously partial. I just chose to highlight a concern that might otherwise not enter the discussion. Your symmetrical concern about people going "la la la I can't hear you" is just as partial and just as valid -- they correct each other.
    – duplode
    Sep 9, 2015 at 17:31
  • To summarize, too many people will jump at a conclusion that might otherwise not enter the discussion :) But don't get me wrong---I don't contest your entitlement to provide a response from one partial angle. I just exercise my entitlement to point it out as such. Sep 9, 2015 at 17:35
  • @MarkoTopolnik It's more like "too many people will jump at a conclusion that might otherwise go unquestioned". People will jump at conclusions anyway; that is what humans do (and Internet-dwelling humans are especially good at that). I just feel that bringing hasty conclusions under the spotlight might help dispelling them.
    – duplode
    Sep 9, 2015 at 17:42
12

Edit

The conjecture originally presented in this answer is now disproved thanks to Jon Ericson. Here is the time evolution of the volume of non-closed, non-negative score questions and answers to them:

Non-closed questions and answers by month

It shows the same behavior as without the "good question" filter. In Q2, 2014 the volume of "good" questions dropped, and over the same period the volume of answers to those questions dropped even more severely. This effect persists to this day, but it was partially reversed in spring of this year.


Original post

I have got a conjecture based on the peculiar behavior of the (answers minus questions) value over time—that is, of the surplus of answers over questions, regardless of the question volume itself. This is the time-series chart of the difference in the weekly volume of answers and questions:

Questions minus answers over time

Where the total volume of questions was increasing all the time, the A-Q difference was suprisingly steady. At the key event in 2014 the difference dropped, but then again maintained the new value, then slighly jumped up very recently. Still, the whole series can be very well approximated with horizontal lines (constants). I think this effect asks for an explanation, and here is my attempt.

Not all questions are alike. There is a specific category of questions which receives an inordinate amount of answers: beginner's questions, often re-asked tens and hundreds of times. Entry-level respondents pounce on those questions because the answer is known to many. Regardless of other types of questions, there may have been a constant number of these and a constant number of answers to them; these answers account for a large proportion of the surplus. If the above is true, then measures which reduced the number of such questions being posted, and also measures which reduced the number of answers to those questions, would both contribute to the reduction of the A-Q surplus.

8
  • It's interesting how distinct the drop-off appears when the data is broken down like that. It kind of begs the question, did something happen to make it harder to post answers (or to make it harder to post easy but redundant questions) around April of 2014?
    – aroth
    Sep 9, 2015 at 12:51
  • 2
    I haven't checked the exact timing, but the feature of the binding close vote (aka. the Golden Hammer) put a significant dent into the number of answers to duplicate questions. Sep 9, 2015 at 12:52
  • Wouldn't the ratio of answers to questions make a more useful measure to look at then the difference? One could even remove closed questions from consideration, though maybe one should count dupe-closed questions as answered at least as much as the target... Sep 10, 2015 at 12:36
  • @Deduplicator aroth already looked at the A/Q ratio and found nothing interesting; this is actually how I arrived at the observation I present here. What would be interesting is to look at just the closed questions and the time series of their weekly volume. Sep 10, 2015 at 12:42
  • When was the rate limiting system changed to one question every 90 minutes for new users? The post about it was in may of 2014, wonder if it was implemented then, or sooner than that.
    – Kevin B
    Sep 10, 2015 at 17:43
  • There it is: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/256084/400654 "As of last night.." may 27th 2014 so that's unlikely to be the cause.
    – Kevin B
    Sep 10, 2015 at 17:48
  • 1
    "measures which reduced the number of answers to those questions..." - dupehammer comes to mind, with the way it speeds up closing of "beginner's questions, often re-asked tens and hundreds of times"
    – gnat
    Sep 10, 2015 at 18:10
  • @gnat That's exactly what I had in mind. It has been mentioned several times on this page (as "mjolnir, "golden hammer" and "binding close vote"). Sep 10, 2015 at 18:15
5

This paragraph referred to previous header ("...is SO declining?")

In order to answer your question by yes, we would have to state, that quantity defines quality. Because in order to say that SO is declining, it would have to mean that the less questions mean less quality (maybe it was simply a poor choice of words or wrong understanding from my side - in that case, disregard this paragraph). Grenerally speaking, the community is striving to have the best questions and answers for them so everybody can find what he/she is looking for and more doesn't necessarily mean better.


The rest is still valid

It's fairly normal that people get bored of something and switch to something newer, fresher and better (from MySpace to Facebook for example). But there is nothing neither newer, nor fresher let alone better than StackOverflow. Otherwise we would all see that "new thing" right?

Or maybe take it this way - maybe human curiosity surpassed the speed of technology evolution - then we're seeing a cool phenomenon here - that currently we are as fast in asking about techno as new techno is coming out.

Or maybe people have finally figured out, how to use search...

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  • 1
    I actually added the "declining" part of title later on, as a cheap news headline trick :) Sep 9, 2015 at 11:14
  • Clever marketing :-)
    – Michal
    Sep 9, 2015 at 11:16
  • of course "declining" can have different meanings. is this even worth mentioning?
    – Fattie
    Sep 9, 2015 at 16:45
  • The question was different before it was edited...
    – Michal
    Sep 9, 2015 at 20:03
-7

For the record, the graph shows that regarding the number of Qs asked on SO, that number has "gone flat", ie growth has stopped. The OP asks:

  • "What would be a good explanation of this?"

Answer: it is absolutely impossible to truly know that. This is precisely in the category of question of "why did the Dow Jones drop last week?" or "Why has Walmart grown and Sears has shrunk?" or "Why did Apple lose half their market share to Samsung?" or "Why has the oil price dropped recently?" It is

absolutely impossible

to "really" answer such questions.

Point: it is possible there is some simple, obvious, secular explanation for the specific change in the graph at that specific time. For example, it could be that (purely an example) on that day a new feature was introduced that eliminates Spanish language questions: in that case it would be utterly reasonable to say "oh there's a specific secular explanation". It would seem there is not such a specific secular explanation because nobody has given one here. So we can set aside a secular explanation (unless someone here has an "ah ha" moment and suddenly realises something dramatically changed on that time), and we can copy and paste ourselves and state, again, with total confidence that: It is

absolutely impossible

to "really" answer such questions". (Such questions as "why did the Dow Jones drop last week?" or "Why has Walmart grown and Sears has shrunk?" or "Why did Apple lose half their market share to Samsung?" or "Why has the oil price dropped recently?" or "Why has SO's growth in questions-aksed ended?")

HOWEVER,

There is an absolutely critical observation to be made here.

It is this dead simple:

• every single (no exceptions) dotcom, which has existed so far, has had a phase of growth of metrics (such as "posts made" or "reviews posted" or "users joined"), and then, that growth phase has ended at some particular point in time.

Note that this is so absolutely and utterly normal ("every time so far") a part of the dotcom business, that, it's an utterly normal thing one talks about in relation to dotcoms. When will the growth phase end, do you guess we're at the end of the growth phase here, what do you think is better, the pre- or post- sellout, and so on.

Indeed it would be astoundingly and wholly remarkable if, SE was the known universe's first dotcom, where, the growth phase has not ended. SO's "run" before the growth phase ended (what was it - 6 years? the wholly useless charts above do not have years indicated on the X axis) is utterly typical and unsurprising.

The only "answer" to your question here, is, that the question is somewhat misguided. All you are saying is "Oh, look at that, as it turned out SO's growth phase lasted X months (80 .. whatever) and it ended in spring of 2014 (whatever)"

Then regarding that observation, you're saying ....... what?

You could comment on it in different ways like "that seems typical" or "Huh - imagine!" or "Man they are taking a risk going for a sellout after rather than before the growth-end" or "what a nice run it was" ... or whatever.

And - by all means - with these "metrics" you can and should certainly look at others: so, things like "ah hah! but if we look at comments made, it's still solidly in the growth phase!" ... or whatever. Do that.

Finally, as mentioned: SE, like Google, is an advertising business. If you're thinking of it more "as a business", then, trivially and obviously, one would look at ad revenues, and see whether that is still in the growth phase; that's more of the "real" metric. (The "other" metrics are just what analysts use to guess what will happen to the actual measure (ie, money) of the business.)

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    There are plenty secular explanations proposed, and in fact all is converging to a conclusion that bad-quality questions from new users constituted a significant proportion of all questions. Measures to reduce such questions were so successful that their effect is visible in the total question volume. Sep 10, 2015 at 17:48
  • Marko - if so, fine. (1) that is utterly, staggeringly, vague. can you or someone (if anyone cares - I don't) state clearly "what changed" (2) can you give the exact date, ideally time of day, when this change happened, and thence see if there is a correlation with the graph in question. if this is fairly clearly correct -- there would seem on this page to be an utter lack of general agreement about a secular explanation -- then fantastic, you've explained the step-change with a secular explanation.
    – Fattie
    Sep 10, 2015 at 17:53
  • Note however that, as explained at vast length, 100.00% of dotcoms have a point where "growth ends". This will (or has already been) true for SE as well. (I could not care less about when that will / has already happened; but if that's the question that interests you .. there you go; the issue is clarified.)
    – Fattie
    Sep 10, 2015 at 17:54
  • 1
    I refer to your statement because nobody has given one here---several people have in fact given several explanations, and additionally all of them revolve around the same period and the same type of changes. There has not been just one change, but several, each of which may contribute to the joint effect. Sep 10, 2015 at 17:57
  • If that's what you feel, then the question is answered for you. I cannot see the slightest, at all, general consensus, nor, nexus of reasons. You state "given several explanations, and additionally all of them revolve around the same period". Then tell me this. What is the count of those explanations in that set? 3? 4? what? Can you list them?
    – Fattie
    Sep 10, 2015 at 17:59
  • 1
    You've used the word "secular" several times; what do you mean by it?
    – jscs
    Sep 10, 2015 at 18:00

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