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We're getting close to the end of the year, which means another annual Developer Survey! As we've done in previous years, we'd like to ask for your thoughts and suggestions when it comes to the most important things that we should be asking developers.

We've got the usual staples covered such as demographic info and the most dreaded, wanted and loved technologies; what else do you think we should cover?

We don't need folks to come up with the survey questions themselves; we're most interested in any premise you'd like to share, so that we can better shape the questions as we put it together. Things like:

  • Did we touch on something last year that you'd like to see us explore more comprehensively this year? What is it, and how could we dig deeper?

  • Was there something in the news this year that you found interesting that you'd like to see us ask folks about?

  • Do you have an idea for something fun we could include to help keep the tone of the survey bright?

Again, here is a link to the 2017 survey for reference if you need it. Remember, we're looking for ideas at this point; please don't feel as if you need to spend a lot of time writing the perfect question for us to include.

Our survey is already comprehensive (also known as 'really freaking long'), so we can't promise to include every question or idea, but your input will help us investigate the things that matter the most.

A big thanks in advance to all that take a moment to share an idea!

Update

Thank you, everyone, who took a little time to offer a suggestion! All of these were helpful, many should be included but for the sake of what little brevity we have left in the survey, only a few of them can be.

Everyone is welcome to continue to leave suggestions, but we're in the process now of turning ideas into questions that fit in the survey and we're pretty much full at this point.

Thank you again to everyone that spent a little time to lend their ideas, we really appreciate it!

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  • 163
    Please don't assume everybody taking the survey is a professional programmer. Last year there were a lot of questions that assumed I'm a professional programmer, but I'm not (for example I remember there was one like "how long have you coded for work?"). I suggest having a question asking "are you a professional programmer?", and users who answer "no" to that question won't get any questions that only professional programmers can answer. Oct 17, 2017 at 16:10
  • 120
    Alcohol habits of successful programmers. Def.
    – user1228
    Oct 17, 2017 at 17:27
  • 3
    It would be nice to see the questions, possible answers, and the answers I gave after the fact. Right now I'm not sure these are available except while taking the survey. Oct 17, 2017 at 19:08
  • 1
    @DonaldDuck and not just streamlining the survey to hide questions irrelevant based on previous answers, but also allowing additional useful questions that wouldn't apply to everyone Oct 17, 2017 at 19:32
  • 18
    Have you guys found "something interesting" this year?. ;) Oct 17, 2017 at 23:21
  • 10
    Minimum amount of screens needed to do job well. Partly serious
    – user5940189
    Oct 18, 2017 at 9:13
  • 10
    Related to what @DonaldDuck said: Don't assume that everyone works in a large corporation. In the previous years there have been some questions that didn't even contain suitable options for freelancers or the self-employed (e.g. "how many people work in your company" options starting from 2.)
    – JJJ
    Oct 18, 2017 at 12:13
  • 17
    If y'all do the "how frequently do you check in code" question again, I'd like to see another option for "definitely when the laptop starts making a weird noise." Oct 18, 2017 at 14:11
  • @DonaldDuck I like your suggestion. Just wanted to add that if for whatever reason we cannot change the format of the survey (for example no conditional questions allowed), we could have "Following section is targeted to professional programmers. Please proceed to question N if this doesn't apply to you" Oct 19, 2017 at 6:26
  • 1
    @user5226582 Or else add an option "I'm not a professional programmer" to those questions. For example, for "how long time have you coded professionally", the possible answers would be "X years", "Y years", "Z years" and "I don't code professionally". As another example, for the question "Does your company encourage you to stay up to date with technology you're working with?" suggested below, the possible answers would be "Yes", "No" and "I don't work for any programming company". Oct 19, 2017 at 11:26
  • @DonaldDuck yeah, that could be the default selected value (to save time). Oct 19, 2017 at 11:36
  • I never seem to know what to use for my role type, in both the annual survey, as well as the recent Stack Overflow salary calculator tool. There are many developers that would consider their domain best described by computational science or "scientific computing". Since this tends to result in desktop (or HPC) computer applications, I tend to select "Desktop Developer". Although if there is a distinction to be made for "Data Scientist" (which I also don't think is a great fit for us) I think the aforementioned new category would be useful. Oct 19, 2017 at 11:36
  • 4
    I'd like to see some questions about cost of living as related to salary. So people can more easily judge if there salary is competitive for the area they live/work in.
    – mal
    Oct 20, 2017 at 9:11
  • 1
    The 2017 survey results show a rather short list (10) of "frameworks, libraries, and other technologies". Did the actual question only include these as options? (I'm too lazy to look at the raw result set) Can it be open-ended this year if it wasn't last time? Oct 24, 2017 at 22:12
  • 2
    Just came here looking for any traces of other people wondering about the SO 2018 marketing analysis campaign. Seriously, I had to abandon that thing after the sixth consecutive question about my ad-blocking behavior (and related). WTF? SO has the right to do marketing research, but shouldn't label it "Developer survey".
    – daniloquio
    Jan 8, 2018 at 21:39

98 Answers 98

2

Job Switch Related

Did you move to, or away from, software development?

Options could include

  • Moved into software development from directly related field (dev/ops, CM, support, etc)
  • Moved into software development from indirectly related field (dev/ops, CM, support, etc)
  • Moved into software development from something completely different (art, marketing, sales, etc)
  • Moved from software development to directly related field (dev/ops, CM, support, etc)
  • Moved from software development into indirectly related field (project management, systems engineering, etc)
  • Moved from software development into something completely different (art, marketing, sales, etc)

It would be interesting to see the in/out flow of software developers/engineers between fields

2

It'd be nice to see a series of questions about how employers help professional growth/development such as:

Does your employer

  1. support/sponsor participation in attending conferences, workshops, seminars
  2. subscribe to and make available online learning services
  3. support/sponsor certificate or degree programs
  4. assign a mentor to check in with you regularly and provide guidance
  5. formally identify/outline an individualized career development plan
2

It would also be interesting to know how many developers had to take a skills assessment for their current position.

And if they did, what that skills assessment might have been comprised of; was it

  • coding test in the form of conceptual/academic questions
  • coding test in the form of being asked to write code to address a particular set of criteria
  • performing a code review
  • completing a q/a or debug exercise
  • development/delivery of a micro-project
  • other
2

When do you find yourself more productive -

A) while working alone

B) while working in a team as a non-lead

C) while working in a team as a leader

Or Rate your productivity (on a scale of 1-10) in the 3 situations.

2

I think it would be interesting to see how developers get access to the paid tooling that they might need in different regions, languages, etc.

Does your company provide all of the tooling (IDE, cloud subscriptions, etc.) that you need to complete your work? If not, how much of your own money have you paid for software development tools in the past year?

  • My company pays for it all
  • I exclusively use free tools
  • Less than $50
  • $50 - $100
  • $100 - $200
  • More than $200
1

I've been wondering about the diversity of computer languages that individual developers must deal with. So something along the lines of:

  • What do you consider to be your primary (preferred?) computer language(s)?
  • What other computer languages must you use to perform your job duties?

I'm guessing that people are motivated to be expert, or at least very good, with their primary or preferred language(s)).

My experience suggests that people must also deal with a number of other languages, which they are less invested in, in order to do their job. When dealing with these languages folks open the editor, get the job done as quickly as they can, and call it good.

For individual languages, I think knowing the relative ratio of these two kinds of language users ("motivated to be expert" vs "just getting my job done") would be very useful information for the designers of those computer languages.

I've looked, but I've not found similar computer language use statistics.

1

How many hours coding do you do each weekday and weekend day for: your main job, your second job/hobby (both or either).

If > 10 hours per day, what routines do you use to keep productive?

1

It would be interesting to know what build tools do people use?

2
  • Only if the list of possible answers include "I don't" and "What is a build tool?".
    – Jongware
    Mar 2, 2018 at 11:06
  • @usr2564301 I agree :) Mar 2, 2018 at 20:29
0

How the work is defined among the developers.

For example:

  1. smaller companies expects developer to do everything from ui design, html mocks, javascript framework and backend framework suitable for project and database.
  2. Fortune 500 companies expects their employees to the subject matter expect on what they passionate and hired particularly for a specific technology.

How the quality of the software will be defined in both the above cases.

In other field like medical.

For example: We cannot expect a passionate heart surgeon to do a successful kidney transplantation. Why not in software industry?

3
  • I know of companies with as little as 3 people that have a dedicated back-end programmer... This isn't really related to company size.
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 20, 2017 at 9:53
  • 1
    @Cerbrus you know of. But i had worked in company of strengh 3 people. I was a php developer who suppose to work with end to end application development from front end to back end. I disagree your comment.
    – Mohan Ram
    Oct 20, 2017 at 10:03
  • @Mohan I've worked a number of different jobs through my career as a web developer. In some roles I've just been server-side code with maybe a little bit of database. Others server side and front end with no database involvement, and others I've been required to be full-stack. The requirements on the developer vary with the varying requirements of the job
    – Scoots
    Oct 23, 2017 at 13:09
0

Regarding delivering code on time or ahead of schedule...

  • What factors have repeatedly helped you?
  • What factors have repeatedly hindered you?
  • Have you found frameworks and/or libraries to primarily be a help or hindrance to your ability to deliver code on time or ahead of schedule?
1
  • Too open-ended.
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 23, 2017 at 8:14
0

My question suggestion is:

If you use Git for version control, what client do you use?

  • Git Bash
  • Git GUI
  • Tortoise Git
  • Source Tree
  • some plugin in your IDE
  • any other...
1
  • Another option: SmartGit
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 23, 2017 at 8:12
0
  • If you are a software developer, will you ever want to be a project manager in future.
  • If you are a project manager who shifted from software developer profile, my question is "do you enjoy your job or the 'software developer' thing gave you more of a relief and satisfaction?"
1
  • Additional - What do you suggest to someone for future.
    – nobalG
    Oct 23, 2017 at 9:19
0

Is P = NP?

If the developer answers "no" they get permabanned.

6
  • Why would they be permabanned when P is obviously not equal to NP?
    – user4639281
    Oct 24, 2017 at 5:00
  • It shows they dont get it. P = NP, even Matt groening knew this.
    – solarflare
    Oct 24, 2017 at 5:43
  • 1
    Where's your proof?
    – user4639281
    Oct 24, 2017 at 5:46
  • it is yet to be proven but have faith it will come, there are people working on it, trust us.
    – solarflare
    Oct 24, 2017 at 6:05
  • 1
    "Have faith" usually doesn't convince programmers. Try again, @DenizC.
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 24, 2017 at 6:48
  • It seems that for N=1, the answer is yes.
    – Bergi
    Nov 3, 2017 at 3:56
0

I'm curious about the UI language preference developers have for their tools (such as IDE / browser / notepad / Office):

  • This question discusses the localization settings for tools you use:
    • The language of the tools I use matches my native language (English).
    • The language of the tools I use matches my native language (non-English).
    • Tool localization is usually available for my native language, but I prefer English.
    • Tool localization is usually unavailable for my language, though I would prefer English anyway.
    • Tool localization is usually unavailable for my language, I would use it had it existed.
    • My setting depends on the tool.
    • Can't decide // don't know // prefer not to answer.

Followup:

  • If setting depends on the tool, please choose the reason(s):
    • My workplace / local IT department enforces working with a certain language.
    • Official documentation or similar resources is very limited or not available in my native language.
    • There is no online community to support the tool in my native language, or information is relatively scarce.
    • I don't like the translations in some of the tools.
0

Same questions as Remote Work but for working on geographically dispersed teams. Also asking:

  • How many countries in the team?
  • Time difference on the team?
  • How does time difference impact your working hours?
0

What causes you to RAGE most at work (checkboxes)?

  • Manager
  • Software that I am using
  • Silly deadlines
  • Existing code left by junior contractors
  • Peers that take their shoes off with smelly feet
  • Creative Company structure
  • Juggling projects
-1

Work-related question

What do you usually do if you are losing concentration, getting bored when coding a certain part of the program / system / etc?

1
-1

Do you like pineapple on pizza? Yes/No

Justification: This is a very polarising question. I would like to know the percentage of programmers who are misguided on this point.

2
  • 5
    I like pizza on my pineapple.
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 20, 2017 at 9:50
  • 1
    We're all living in 2017, you're living in 3017.
    – JamesENL
    Oct 22, 2017 at 8:34
-1

About quality assurance practices

Do you do in your projects:

  1. Unit testing?
  2. Integration testing?
  3. Automated UI testing?
  4. Manual UI testing?
  5. Static code analysis?
  6. Continuous integration?
  7. Code coverage enforcing rules

Inspired by "Do you do unit testing?" question from JetBrains DevEcosystem survey (https://www.jetbrains.com/research/devecosystem-2017/)

Or:

How important are to you:

  1. Unit tests?
  2. Integration tests?
  3. Automated UI testing?
  4. Manual UI testing?

Another option might be to ask about code coverage developers are targeting (e.g. 90+ %) or if they even have at all this particular type of tests.

2
  • Define "important". Everyone in their right mind would like to have at least the first three.
    – CodeCaster
    Oct 23, 2017 at 20:50
  • @CodeCaster Then maybe we should ask how much time they invest into each of those? I know from JetBrains survey that for example not all developers write unit tests: jetbrains.com/research/devecosystem-2017 Oct 23, 2017 at 20:57
-1

1) Are you working from your Home Town?

2) If not then, Did you relocated to another town within your home country?

3) If not then, Did you relocated to another country?

In your entire career, How many times did you relocate cities for better Job opportunities.

It will be interesting to know how its difficult to relocate across different cities/countries with/without family to get better Job opportunities and how its frequent/common in todays days.

-2

Maybe an interesting question:

Do you think the modern design principles and concepts are good or evil?

  • SOLID/DI/IoC/you-name-it is the Holy Bible (aka Cargo cult)
  • I'm trying to follow the most (the relevant) ones, but sometimes there is a better way
  • KISS & YAGNI all the time!
  • What are design principles? I do Google driven development.
  • Please send me teh codez.

Background: there are many opinions, and it seems that even such solid things as SOLID are being criticized by some experienced developers or architects. It would be interesting to know whether the SO community rather follows the "law" or writes the code "from the heart".

-2
  • How often do you socialize with engineering coworkers?

  • How often do you socialize with non-engineering coworkers?

  • What "soft" skill could you improve that would most likely improve your career?

    • Communications
    • Listening
    • Interviewing
-2

Maybe ask about prefered working environment? Like co-worker (even we know we don't always have co-workers we like), or like working desk and the room, or maybe how's the office's coffee machine.

-2

what tools do you use for your coding ?

2
  • 1
    A real programmer uses butterflies.
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 24, 2017 at 6:46
  • Such an open-ended question can only be met with an open-ended answer: "I use programming tools".
    – Gimby
    Nov 3, 2017 at 12:45
-3

Is universal design and accessibility of user interfaces important? What is your own maturity with design and development using any IT accessibility standards? What is your opinion on the maturity of your team and organization?

Either websites: Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG);
Authoring tools: Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines (ATAG);
Browsers: User Agent Accessibility Guidelines (UAAG);
Web applications: Accessible Rich Internet Applications (WAI-ARIA);
or organizationally developed processes for user interface evaluation of accessibility with a specific standard such as U.S. Access Board Standards ('Section 508') e.g., https://www.access-board.gov/guidelines-and-standards or test processes built upon those standards https://www.dhs.gov/publication/dhs-section-508-compliance-test-processes ?

2
  • 1
    This should be multiple answers, not a single. It is impossible to vote on each suggestion when you combine them.
    – user4639281
    Oct 17, 2017 at 22:10
  • Fair point. I guess I struggled with responding to request for ideas to add to the survey and ensuring they are asked together in relation to the same topic. I thought the goal was feedback and StackOverflow team would consider and reformat. Oct 18, 2017 at 14:09
-3
  • Have you detected & spotted early signs of burnout and managed to avoid it?

  • How do you avoid more sidejobs or overtime thrown on you that leads to tech.debt and further burnout?

1
  • 1
    What's "burnout"? Answers would be very subjective
    – Liam
    Oct 18, 2017 at 12:20
-3

Are non-work related questions allowed? Almost evrey programmer I meet is investing in cryptocurrency. I wonder how large that percentage really is...

1
  • Also lots of non-programmers invest in cryptocurrency by the way, if you have disposable income you have freedom to play with it. As a programmer I would be more interested in the backbone behind cryptocurrencies: blockchains. Is the technique being applied in projects, and how?
    – Gimby
    Nov 3, 2017 at 12:51
-3

What is the best Database as a Service (PaaS) that currently exist for a developer?

-3

I think it would be really interesting to ask.

How would you describe your political orientation?

  • left
  • mid-left
  • mid-right
  • right

I would be interested in correlating this with the developers role/languages.

1
  • 1
    • somewhere in the middle.
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 28, 2017 at 15:57
-4

Do you run your own business?

Like a small SaaS or something unrelated to IT. A very interesting topic, but doubt it will fit in a single question.