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Update on Apr 13th, 2022: Thank you for all the comments and suggestions! We will be reviewing everything posted thus far but cannot commit to reviewing new posts.

It is that time of year again when we ask you all to be our second pair of eyes on the annual Developer Survey! Below you will find the choices we would like to include in the 2022 survey. If you notice any additional options that should be included, please post an answer below with the name, category, and a brief description or references to why it should be included in this year's survey. One suggestion per answer, please!

We will be collecting feedback until Tuesday Apr 12 2022.

Programming, scripting, and markup language:

  • APL
  • Assembly
  • Bash/Shell
  • C
  • C#
  • C++
  • Clojure
  • COBOL
  • Crystal
  • Dart
  • Delphi
  • Elixir
  • Erlang
  • F#
  • Go
  • Groovy
  • Haskell
  • HTML/CSS
  • Java
  • JavaScript
  • Julia
  • Kotlin
  • LISP
  • Lua
  • MATLAB
  • Objective-C
  • Perl
  • PHP
  • PowerShell
  • Python
  • R
  • Ruby
  • Rust
  • Scala
  • SQL
  • Solidity
  • Swift
  • TypeScript
  • VBA

Database environments:

  • Cassandra
  • Couchbase
  • CouchDB
  • Cloud Firestore
  • DynamoDB
  • Elasticsearch
  • IBM DB2
  • MariaDB
  • Microsoft SQL Server
  • MongoDB
  • MySQL
  • Oracle
  • PostgreSQL
  • Realtime Database
  • Redis
  • SQLite

Cloud Platforms:

  • AWS
  • DigitalOcean
  • Firebase
  • Google Cloud Platform
  • Heroku
  • IBM Cloud or Watson
  • Microsoft Azure
  • Oracle Cloud Infrastructure

Web frameworks and technologies:

  • Angular
  • Angular.js
  • ASP.NET
  • ASP.NET Core
  • Blazor
  • Django
  • Drupal
  • Express
  • FastAPI
  • Flask
  • Gatsby
  • Laravel
  • Next.js
  • Node.js
  • Phoenix
  • React.js
  • Ruby on Rails
  • Spring
  • Svelte
  • Symfony
  • Vue.js

Other frameworks and libraries:

  • .NET Framework
  • .NET Core / .NET 5
  • Apache Kafka
  • Apache Spark
  • Capacitor
  • Cordova
  • Electron
  • Flutter
  • GTK
  • Hadoop
  • Hugging Face Transformers
  • Ionic
  • jQuery
  • Keras
  • NumPy
  • Pandas
  • Qt
  • React Native
  • Scikit-learn
  • Tidyverse
  • TensorFlow
  • Torch/PyTorch
  • Uno Platform
  • Xamarin

Tools:

  • Ansible
  • Chef
  • Deno
  • Docker
  • Flow
  • Git
  • Kubernetes
  • Pulumi
  • Puppet
  • Terraform
  • Unity 3D
  • Unreal Engine
  • Yarn

Development environments:

  • Android Studio
  • Atom
  • CLion
  • Eclipse
  • Emacs
  • GoLand
  • IntelliJ
  • IPython/Jupyter
  • Nano
  • NetBeans
  • Neovim
  • Notepad++
  • PhpStorm
  • PyCharm
  • RAD Studio
  • Rider
  • RStudio
  • RubyMine
  • Spyder
  • Sublime Text
  • TextMate
  • Vim
  • Visual Studio
  • Visual Studio Code
  • Webstorm
  • Xcode

Operating systems:

  • BSD
  • Linux-based
  • macOS
  • Windows
  • Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)

Version Control:

Last year, we saw over 90% of respondents use Git; this year, we want to ask more about how developers use version control.

Version Control Interaction:
  • Command-line
  • GUI application
Version Control Hosting:
  • AWS CodeCommit
  • Azure Repos
  • Cloud Source Repositories
  • Bitbucket
  • GitHub
  • GitLab
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  • 32
    I am so sorry to sound harsh, but can we please start keeping track of previous years? It feels like the list is getting reset to its initial state over and over - most of the responses from 2021 can be applied here. Apr 5, 2022 at 17:20
  • 9
    For reference, the corresponding post from 2021: Review our languages and platforms for Dev Survey 2021
    – V2Blast
    Apr 5, 2022 at 18:14
  • 1
    is there a graph/chart of overview of your previous surveys. Really want to see.
    – Jovylle
    Apr 7, 2022 at 16:08
  • 1
    @JovylleBermudez You can see results (and download full data sets) from all past surveys here. Apr 7, 2022 at 17:24
  • 2
    What does "Flow" (in the tools category) refer to? If it's the JS-typechecker, I don't see why it's in a different category than TypeScript.
    – Bergi
    Apr 8, 2022 at 16:15
  • 4
    Downvoted for using code markup to display data. The only reason that was ever necessary was to display a table. This is not tabular data, but even if it were, there's table markup now. Either * item or item would work for a list in regular markup.
    – mdfst13
    Apr 10, 2022 at 14:25
  • 4
    This has become a name-dropping bonanza! Apr 12, 2022 at 18:16
  • You may include Pascal and pseudo-code as programming languages. Also you may include H2 and derby as (R)DBMS. As for IDE you may include LiteIde (For golang)
    – Victor
    Apr 14, 2022 at 1:58
  • What was the 2021 insight dashboard built with? The visuals are awesome! May 16, 2022 at 14:55
  • 1
    @BrandonRose thank you! we use amCharts
    – David Staff
    May 17, 2022 at 17:15
  • How was the initial list compiled?
    – Joooeey
    Aug 8, 2022 at 14:48

62 Answers 62

95

Imagine that you, like me, are primarily an embedded software/firmware developer in your professional life—what options would you select for the vast majority of these categories?

  • Programming language? Sure; I know how to fill that one out every year, and I find it interesting/useful.
  • Database environments? No, I don't use any of those (although, to be fair, some embedded developers probably do).
  • Cloud platforms? No.
  • Web frameworks? Hardly!
  • "Other frameworks"? Nope. Nobody runs this kind of heavy bloatware on embedded systems, half of which are just web frameworks anyway that somehow escaped correct categorization.
  • Tools? Well, maybe, but only because this is a motley collection of completely unrelated things, some of which should probably go into the "frameworks/libraries" category, others of which should go into the "version control" category, and others of which are really just so cloud-specific that nobody but web developers are using them anyway.
  • Development environments? Yeah, this is fine. Although kinda useless, really, because most of those choices are so platform/language-specific that it becomes meaningless having them as their own category.
  • Operating systems? Sure… Does this mean on my development PC, or on my target system? Or both? I never know. And, if it's the target platform, where's the "Other" option, for those of us who target bare-metal with no operating system in sight, and/or the "RTOS" category?

As usual, this survey, like the blog, is so incredibly biased towards web developers that it's not even funny. Heck, even desktop developers get largely excluded by this survey, which is the other hat that I wear when not doing embedded. Please don't forget that not every software developer builds web apps.


I wonder what is the point of having all of these curated lists and categories, anyway. Has it been considered just allowing users to enter the names of tags on Stack Overflow that represent their interests? A suggested list of top tags could even be pulled from the individual's activity on the site, if they were logged in, but even without that feature, it seems like this would be simultaneously more useful, easier to use (auto-complete), and easier to maintain. A data analyst could easily pick through the collective selections and sort them into categories after the results were in. No one filling out the survey would feel excluded by not seeing their favorite thingadongdong listed. And no one would have to fill out an "Other" free-form text field, which a data analyst would then have to sort through anyway, dealing with misspellings, variations in formatting, etc.

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  • 48
    That's been a gripe of mine about the dev survey for years now. It's very, very web-dev focused.
    – irowe
    Apr 6, 2022 at 12:42
  • 3
    I'm not involved in the survey, so I can't answer all of your questions. What I can do is ask a question and make a hypothesis - The question - Are there things you use that don't fit into these categories that is missing? You haven't said anything about that. I... feel like having a bunch of extra questions as long as we're not omitting something is OK. It's totally fine for you to have no response to some of it. That doesn't mean we should exclude it because only a subset of devs use it.
    – Catija
    Apr 6, 2022 at 13:23
  • 13
    The hypothesis: If you have a list of things to choose from, you're far more likely to mention more items than you would otherwise. If the goal is to understand whether people have used something, even once, a list doesn't require them to pull items out of the ether and remember everything... filling in auto-complete does. I run into this all the time. I list things I do and then someone asks "what about this" - oh, yeah, I did that a few years back but I don't want to ever do it again.... or oh, wow, how could I forget that - I use it every day! A list is lower cognitive load.
    – Catija
    Apr 6, 2022 at 13:26
  • 3
    As to importing tags from SO - that only works for highly-engaged users and would also mean that some people might be concerned that their answers were being tied back to SO directly. From what I understand, we try to avoid that entirely. Having an SO account isn't required to do the survey and I'd be concerned with the dev survey seemingly tying your answers to your account.
    – Catija
    Apr 6, 2022 at 13:30
  • 1
    @Braiam It's not a closed list - it's a list with an "other" field. There's a huge difference... and we're giving people the chance now to expand the list because we know it's important to y'all.
    – Catija
    Apr 6, 2022 at 13:46
  • 1
    @Braiam Not a question I can answer - maybe post an answer asking for help understanding how it's utilized?
    – Catija
    Apr 6, 2022 at 13:50
  • 1
    Agreed, big iron devs are also excluded. Most of the fortune 500 companies out there still have IBM i (previously known as AS/400). And, there are still quite a few mainframes as well. Apr 6, 2022 at 14:09
  • 2
    Yep, every year, I have exactly the same Answers for all Categories like @Cody, and same Feeling of "Exclusion", from working in "Macro-Automation" (OS/App/Web-Automation). => Nearly all Technologies included in the Survey can be used and further automated at some "higher Level" through Macro-Scripting.
    – chivracq
    Apr 6, 2022 at 14:24
  • 3
    @Catija Yes, there are many, many things I use on a day-to-day basis that aren't included in any of these lists. I thought that would be obvious, since embedded devs still use tools as much as any other type of dev. This particular list is just biased towards web devs. I didn't want to try to make a competing list in my answer, because, frankly, I question the whole effort to do so, since it'll never be even reasonably comprehensive. Even if I did a good job for embedded devs, what about enterprise devs, like jmarkmurphy mentioned, a field I know very little about? Etc. etc. Apr 7, 2022 at 3:23
  • 4
    @Catija I don't understand why importing tags only works for highly-engaged users. You mean that the automatic suggestion of tags would only work? Yeah, sure... That's fine. It also takes significant programming effort to implement. It's an optional feature, something for future expansion. The idea of allowing people to specify their preferred tech/tools/etc. using existing SO tags can still work fine, even without any auto import. You'd still be able to pull from the SO tag database to get autocompletion, etc. Apr 7, 2022 at 3:25
  • 1
    Besides that, we already require users to specify their SO profile so they can get the badge, so it seems like we have already crossed that bridge. It is, of course, optional, but so would be any kind of fetching of your top tags. Since, as you mentioned to Braiam, there is already an "Other" option, why not just go all in? Why bother to maintain this curated list? Surely it takes a lot of time and effort for someone, as noted by this very question, year after year. And, inevitably, people feel excluded, because their favorite thing isn't listed. Having a list implies preference to those items Apr 7, 2022 at 3:26
  • 14
    @Catija The main problem is that the survey in the end come to all manner of strange conclusions like "C++ is in decline in favour of C#" or something like that. But if you work with embedded systems, C# doesn't even apply. For conclusions like that to make sense, I think you need to separate it into web, desktop, system and embedded. All these areas are quite different. Similarly, it doesn't make sense to use buzzword terms like "do you work with front end or back end"? Well, what's the "front end" of my embedded system? A serial bus? Some LCD I happened to have in the current project?
    – Lundin
    Apr 7, 2022 at 10:10
  • 2
    @CodyGray so what option do you need to be included in the survey to include embedded system developers?
    – justhalf
    Apr 7, 2022 at 14:30
  • 4
    @justhalf I am puzzled at how you could read my answer and conclude that there is only a single "option" missing that needs to be included. My point is that nearly all of the choices here are completely irrelevant, and there would need to be at least this many more choices added in order to cover even the single sub-field that is embedded development. I could make a list of the tools I personally use, but that wouldn't cover the entire gamut, and it certainly wouldn't cover any specialties outside of embedded. This is why the whole attempt to generate a curated list of tools is in error. Apr 7, 2022 at 17:26
  • 6
    Semi related, but, the web development scene is the most inward focused of any industry I've ever seen. I've been in several industries at this point, they all knew what web development was (and usually made fun of its tech churn). Now I do web dev on a daily basis and I'm frankly shocked at the level of ignorance of anything "not web", this is the only time I heard stuff like "C/C++ isn't really used for anything anymore", which shows they don't even know the OS their code runs on. There's a whole "web universe" of tools and brand names.
    – jrh
    Apr 8, 2022 at 12:03
51

Version Control Interaction

Might be worth splitting it into at least three: command line, GUI, and through the primary source code editor. I know some people use applications like SourceTree or TortoiseGit to work with Git. Others only ever use what the IDE offers.

8
  • 47
    Some crazy people even use both a GUI and the command-line to interact with their version control software. Will these be exclusive options? If so, there needs to be a "Both/All of the Above" choice. Apr 6, 2022 at 6:11
  • 9
    @CodyGray I assume it's the primary one. I'm crazy as well, as I use the command-line and my IDE to use Git. But I wouldn't really touch anything else. I'd say the primary is the command-line, though, as I'd do the most routine of tasks in the IDE: fetch, commit, push, and the git blame annotations. Maybe look at the most recent history. Anything more advanced like re-writing the history (before pushing) or searching through commits and such I do on the command line.
    – VLAZ
    Apr 6, 2022 at 6:16
  • 8
    @VLAZ You're not alone in your craziness.
    – walen
    Apr 6, 2022 at 7:43
  • @CodyGray I suppose I'm one of those given that I use Magit on emacs and the git binary.
    – Braiam
    Apr 6, 2022 at 13:40
  • 2
    Many of my colleagues talk about VS Code IDE's Git power and user-friendliness, so I can definitely back this suggestion. Apr 8, 2022 at 10:11
  • Agreed with @VLAZ - the question should ask what you primarily use. For example, I create my Git repos in Visual Studio because it adds an appropriate .gitignore. From that point forward, I use Git Extensions. Although answering "both" would be technically correct, it would feel misleading. Apr 11, 2022 at 21:14
  • Heck, there are still legacy systems in my place of work that we have to eyeball Apr 12, 2022 at 8:16
  • I like this idea because typing in git commands all the time is quite cumbersome. Magit should be one of the options
    – user3064538
    Apr 13, 2022 at 2:37
35

Fastify

Web frameworks and technologies:

Fastify is the rising star of node backend development. It is the fast alternative to express.

A lot of companies are using it and the project itself is hosted by the OpenJS foundation.

Questions related to fastify on SO

32

Tools

Deno

Tools why is Deno under it? It should be directly comparable to Node.js There was an article on it on this blog. It is also literally in the name: "de-no" is flipped around "no-de".

Flow

Is it this Flow? The static type checker that compiles to JavaScript? If so, it is a direct competitor to TypeScript. Yes, TS does a few more things but it does not make a lot of sense to have them listed under different places. TS is listed under "Programming, scripting, and markup language".

Git

Is it really worth listing it under this category? It should be under version control systems. Which is not present. Even if we assume that no VCS section is needed, why are there not any other source control systems? SVN and Mercurial still exist.

Sure, later on you say that over 90% of the respondents use Git which might make the other competitors there not worth the time. However, if the reasoning is "no need to ask, Git will dominate", then by the same logic, why include Git?

Overall, I feel that a VCS section is warranted. Even if Git still dominates it, it is a valuable data point. If it does not, then it is even more valuable.

Yarn

Another pair: Yarn and NPM. The latter is not mentioned anywhere.

(in general)

The "tools" section feels weird. From Unreal engine, through Kubernetes, to Yarn covers a whole lot of ground. Yet there are only 13 entries. It feels exceptionally anaemic. Each language and each environment probably has a dozen common tools used. What exactly is the criteria for something to fall under this category?

Here is a short list of things I use on a regular basis: log viewer (Seq), static code checker (ESLint), dependency management (Nuget, Maven), automation tools (AutoHotkey, Puppeteer, Selenium), documentation builder (Swagger), work management (Jira, Trello). This is a very short list but it still covers 10 items already. I am sure I can come up with three more if I widen a few (sub)categories. And if a few people also suggest more items and more (sub)categories, we can get triple or quadruple the size of the current Tools list. What is a tool and what should and should not go under it?

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  • 10
    I 2nd the VCS comments. My company (over 3k employees) still uses SVN, and our VCS hosting is all internal on our own servers. I didn't see either of those on the proposed list
    – vbnet3d
    Apr 5, 2022 at 17:14
  • 4
    If a VCS section is added, it might also be worth adding an "Other" option, as there are going to be some respondents (me for example) who will use a system for work that is not worth having its own option for (TFVC for me) while also making use of Git for personal projects
    – Justinw
    Apr 6, 2022 at 14:22
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Programming, scripting, and markup language:

it would be nice to include OCaml: this multi-paradigm / functional programming language has an active community (and in SO for example, has more questions than the already-mentioned language)

Operating systems:

Currently the list mentions:

BSD
Linux-based
MacOS
Windows
Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)

Obviously for Linux-based OSes, there are many different distributions; but we might be interested in knowing what family of Linux distributions (e.g. APT-based, RPM-based, or with a different packaging strategy) is most used in this or that area…

29

In "Other frameworks and libraries" this is listed:

.NET Core / .NET 5

I'm wondering why this would reference .NET 5 when .NET 6 is the current (and of course LTS) .NET version?

4
  • 7
    I agree. I perhaps ".NET Core / .NET 5+" would work?
    – Daveoc64
    Apr 5, 2022 at 23:10
  • 3
    .NET 5 support ends May 8, 2022... Apr 6, 2022 at 13:32
  • 21
    Just call it .NET
    – aloisdg
    Apr 7, 2022 at 12:38
  • It also leaves out anyone maintaining legacy web systems. For instance, the latest framework that the main project I maintain can support is .NET 4 Apr 12, 2022 at 8:21
21

Under the Tools section, if Yarn is listed, then Node Package Manager almost certainly should be likewise.

1
  • 13
    Yeah, yeah, every year this list keeps getting reset to the initial state, and every year we keep reporting the same issues... There are also alternatives to NPM/Yarn that should be listed too, IMO, but at least let's get the default freaking package manager in the list :) Apr 5, 2022 at 16:42
17

Message brokers

You have included Apache Kafka in "Other frameworks and libraries", but similar technologies have been excluded. Moreover, in today distributed architectures they are very common.


This list could be very long because there are a lot of similar softwares and services in this field (e.g. Amazon SQS ).

Maybe could be better to add a general option like "A message broker"?

15

Add a separate category for runtimes.

Both Node.js and Deno are neither web frameworks / technologies nor are they tools — they are JavaScript (and TypeScript directly in the case of Deno) runtimes based on the V8 engine.

2
  • 2
    Same for Java runtimes, there are multiple competing ones
    – Bergi
    Apr 6, 2022 at 18:17
  • You could even make a distinction between node, deno (engine + platform api + dependency systems + etc) versus v8, spidermonkey, javascriptcore, etc (just engine)
    – starball
    Oct 13, 2022 at 4:53
14

Other frameworks and libraries

Why is jQuery under here and not under Web frameworks and technologies? I know it's not a framework but it is indelible from the web. I would assume it falls under a technology.

1
  • 1
    React.js is "not a framework" (at least that's what all the proponents keep yelling at me, I mean, telling me), so it must be a technology :). Apr 5, 2022 at 15:34
14

Apart from the additions mentioned in the answers, please fix the miscategorisations:

  • Node.js is not a web framework, it's a generic runtime.
  • Similarly, Spring is not only for the web.
  • jQuery, while not a framework, is definitely a web library
  • Deno is not a "tool", it's a runtime that should be in the same category as Node.js
  • Unity and Unreal Engine should probably be in the frameworks category as well
13

WASM/WebAssembly?

Not sure what the categories even mean so I'm not going to venture a guess as to where this one goes, but a related thing is Microsoft's Blazor.

12

Languages that compile to JavaScript

There are some popular languages that compiles to JS used in frontend and node development.

Or at least add a single "A language compiled into JS" option, so you get a general information without adding so many options.

0
12

Version control interaction

Have a slider to measure percentage between CLI use and GUI use. This would be much more interesting than a checkbox for each possibility.

Version control hosting

Split this into cloud providers and self-hosted instances

Cloud

  • The ones you already have
  • Codeberg.org

Self-hosted

  • GitLab (repeat)
  • Bitbucket (repeat)
  • Gogs
  • Gitea
  • Gitee
  • Just a folder at the other end of SSH
1
  • 2
    We could add sourcehut too
    – aloisdg
    Apr 7, 2022 at 12:40
11

Nginx, HAProxy, Traefik... Apache

In "Web frameworks and technologies"

It's 2022, the world is dominated by web APIs and nobody use a reverse proxy anymore? Or a load balancer?

Most of these tools can be also used as kubernetes ingress controllers, so their usage is.

  • ningx, it used as a web server, reverse proxy, kubernetes ingress controller. The tag has over 50k questions
  • HAProxy has 8k questions related
  • traefik, just 2k questions but it is the most recent one
  • Apache is THE web server, not modern as the others but still very common
3
11

In the databases category it currently says "Realtime Database", to indicate the Firebase Realtime Database (I suggested it 😀). Seeing it without context of "Firebase" is confusing though, so likely leads to people selecting the option for other databases too. I recommend using either "Firebase Realtime Database" or "Realtime Database (Firebase)" instead.

10

The Graph Database Neo4j is missing from the Databases list

1
  • 2
    Along with this, Cypher query language is also missing. Apr 11, 2022 at 18:14
9

More databases:

You haven't covered testing tools/frameworks/mocking:

Build/Pipeline tools, eg:

Platform tools, eg:

Vulnerability scanning tools, eg:

  • Blackduck
  • Twistlock
  • Checkmarx
  • Gatecrash
  • Conftest
  • Fortify
4
  • 1
    Yep, very good about "Testing Tools", => + for "Web-Automation"/"Test Automation" also: 'selenium' + 'imacros' ("my" Tag, ah-ah...!) + 'kantu' + 'UI.Vision' (formely 'Kantu', no Tag, Website), and I miss a few... // All those "Tools" for Test Automation require some Scripting, often with their own "Proprietary" Scripting Language...
    – chivracq
    Apr 11, 2022 at 15:01
  • 1
    I think that every language included in The List deserves its own sublists with testing tools, building tools, mocking tools and so on. Including only every tool from the Java or JavaScript ecosystem would not help to get the real picture.
    – lifeisfoo
    Apr 12, 2022 at 15:49
  • @lifeisfoo of course. the mentioned items are just examples (see the little "eg"?) and I used examples from the main ecosystem I'm familiar with, which is Java.
    – Bohemian Mod
    Apr 12, 2022 at 17:13
  • Yes, I have seen it ;-)
    – lifeisfoo
    Apr 12, 2022 at 17:19
8

Qt Creator. You include Qt in the list of "other frameworks and libraries", so it would only be logical to include Qt's official IDE within the list of environments.

6

Web frameworks and technologies:

6

In the Database environments section I'm missing RavenDB.

1
6

IBM i (formerly OS/400) and z/OS in operating systems to give a nod to the big iron. Reports of their death are greatly exaggerated.

6

OVH and Scaleway

in "Cloud Platforms" section

These are two of the main European cloud providers.

The former, OVH, is probably the biggest cloud provider inside the EU (despite the lack of fire extinguishers)

The latter, Scaleway, is another fast growing cloud provider.

6

As VLAZ previously pointed out, there's a lot of variety when it comes to how people interact with their version control system. I'd add GitHub's web interface to the list. (And, one assumes, the other providers offer something similar.) If I'm looking at a PR, it's often easiest to just make changes on GitHub without needing to pull it locally.

It might be informative to have a "check all that apply" question. Lately I've been working with people who are primarily technical writers. They prefer to use GitHub Desktop, but it's really common for them to need to drop into the command line when there's something the GUI doesn't handle well.

Speaking of which, it would be interesting to see which GUIs are most popular. Might be a bit of scope-creep, however. ;-)

6

Programming, scripting, and markup language

  • SAS

    Historically, SAS dominated the applied stats world, but it's been losing ground due to being commercial (a la MATLAB). It would be interesting to see how this trend is playing out on SO.

    In terms of question traffic, is on par with or exceeds many of the included language tags:

1
  • 1
    I second this. I've used SAS extensively in my initial years - it was the go-to programming language for healthcare stats. Sadly (not really though), we moved towards opensource platforms and languages - python, apache spark, jupyter, etc.
    – samkart
    Apr 11, 2022 at 10:17
6

Operating systems:

  • Chrome OS (Although it would fall into the Linux-based category, it probably should be listed as one of the other options)

Programming, scripting, and markup language:

  • BASIC

  • Fortran

(both of them are still used)

Development environments:

  • Lazarus (widely used with Delphi)
6

Ask for frequency and time

In order to get a better picture and to partially solve @CodyGray's issue, you could try to measure how often a language/framework/tool is used - and for how long.

Survey example options

stackoverflow survey mock 1

A more meaningful chart

In this way you could clearly see how a 64.96% language like JavaScript is truly distributed among developers. Because saying

64.96% of responders USE JavaScript

is different from saying

64.96% of responders use JavaScript AND the 70% of them have been using it for less than three years

stackoverflow survey mock 2

Moreover, you could see how "less popular languages" are used.

21.01% of responders use C AND the 80% of them have been using it for more than five years on a daily basis

stackoverflow survey mock 3


warning: numbers are not real, they are just placeholders


Questions and answers

Do you use it? (frequency)

  • Never used
  • In the past
  • Just a try
  • Sometimes
  • Often
  • Daily

For how long? (time)

  • Less than 1 year
  • Between 1 and 3 years
  • 3+ years
  • 5+ years
  • 10+ years
5

Will there be an "Other" option, and how would this "Other" option be processed?

1
  • An "Other" option will be available, and this other post explains a bit about how it is processed.
    – JNat StaffMod
    May 5, 2022 at 9:08
5

Will there still be a category for the types of development people do?

  • web applications (front- and/or backend)
  • desktop applications
  • kernel development
  • device drivers
  • mobile applications
  • embedded systems
  • games (console/desktop/mobile)
  • developer tools
  • plug-ins (for browsers/Photoshop/Audacity/etc.)
  • enterprise management tools
  • line-of-business applications
  • network management tools
  • computer science research
  • data collection and analysis
  • robotics
  • machine learning
  • AI research
  • security research and/or tools
  • teaching

Will there be a category to learn how developers deal with documentation? Is documentation under source control alongside other source files? Is documentation maintained in some sort of wiki? Markdown, HTML, Literate Programming, plain text, TeX, LaTeX, Word, LibreOffice, roff, troff?

Missing IDE: Arduino

Missing programming language: OpenSCAD

4

Development environments

The RAD Studio item should be annotated with Delphi and C++ Builder as it is a single development environment, but many users, especially Delphi ones, know and refer to the IDE as Delphi (or C++ Builder) and not as RAD Studio and might not recognize RAD Studio as an appropriate choice.

RAD Studio - Delphi, C++ Builder

7
  • 1
    Well maybe if they didn't change the product's name every two years, the devs using their product would recognize it. Delphi, Borland C++Builder, Turbo C++ (the RAD version), Codegear, Embarcadero Delphi/C++ Builder, RAD Studio... I don't think the confusion here is caused by SO.
    – Lundin
    Apr 11, 2022 at 12:46
  • @Lundin You are mixing apples and oranges, including company names. There are only two products: Delphi and C++ Builder which use same IDE also called RAD Studio if you use both languages. But users that only use single language will know the IDE as Delphi or C++ Builder and installed shortcuts will have those names.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Apr 11, 2022 at 13:50
  • They did call C++ Builder for Codegear and Turbo C++ and who knows what else though.
    – Lundin
    Apr 11, 2022 at 13:54
  • @Lundin There was Turbo C++ for Windows released in 2006 and replaced with C++ Builder in 2007 (other Turbo variants of languages were for DOS).
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Apr 11, 2022 at 14:16
  • Complete list here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%2B%2BBuilder. They give versions city names too now... the current version Alexandria obviously got the hottest libraries.
    – Lundin
    Apr 11, 2022 at 14:25
  • @Lundin Sorry, what is your point?
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Apr 11, 2022 at 16:27
  • That they constantly change name of the product(s).
    – Lundin
    Apr 12, 2022 at 6:12

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