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May 21, 2019 at 14:03 history edited Anita TaylorStaff CC BY-SA 4.0
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Apr 16, 2019 at 0:32 comment added Xam @pushkin probably the downvoters are Java developers xD.
Apr 11, 2019 at 20:54 comment added Mathieu Guindon @dwirony good question - especially given VBA scored better than VB.NET last year, where VB6 held the "most dreaded" position. I find it very curious that neither VB6 nor VB.NET are even in the dread-list this year, as if everything VB* had been lumped together under "VBA", which is obviously terribly wrong, but apparently they didn't lump anything together, or so I was told. I wrote What's Wrong With VBA? in response to that unexpected 4-positions increase in VBA's dreadfulness.
Apr 10, 2019 at 13:33 comment added Luuklag meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/382705/… I'd love some insight into the developers' perspective as per my question @JuliaSilge
Apr 9, 2019 at 21:10 answer added Jeremy Banks timeline score: 16
Apr 9, 2019 at 20:10 comment added pushkin I'm genuinely curious why people are downvoting this. Do they not like the key findings that have been selected? Kind of comical
Apr 9, 2019 at 18:50 comment added TylerH @SombreroChicken Then you misunderstand the issue. It's not about whether one gender is more interested on average than another in programming. The numbers in the industry routinely do not match the response from asking individuals. This is the reason there is a focus on it, because checking yourself on occasion to make sure you're not being inadvertently or unnecessarily discriminatory is the morally and socially responsible thing to do. Remember, privilege is invisible.
Apr 9, 2019 at 18:49 comment added Braiam @TylerH or they could have included the project incentives, which are income.
Apr 9, 2019 at 18:37 history edited Cody GrayMod
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Apr 9, 2019 at 18:37 comment added Todd Chaffee I was disappointed in the layout of the "Developer Role and Gender" chart. It explains that "developer types above the line have respondents that are more likely than average to be men". Making those jobs look above average? I'd rather see those below the line: needs improvement.
Apr 9, 2019 at 18:36 comment added Hatted Rooster Exactly, thank you @Passerby for explaining.
Apr 9, 2019 at 18:27 comment added Passer By @IncreasinglyIdiotic You misread, "gender shouldn't even matter in the first place" as in there shouldn't be such a focus on the issue.
Apr 9, 2019 at 18:19 comment added Closed as off topic @SombreroChicken "Whatever the reason is that more men are interested in this field vs women is, it shouldn't really matter". The reason could definitely matter. I actually can't think of a reason that wouldn't matter. It is not about artificially forcing a 50/50 men to women ratio. Its about asking why more women aren't interested in programming to begin with. If gender truly did not matter, wouldn't we have nearly 50/50 men to women across most fields?
Apr 9, 2019 at 17:22 answer added pushkin timeline score: 26
Apr 9, 2019 at 17:03 comment added Hatted Rooster @TylerH Yeah I do. Whatever the reason is that more men are interested in this field vs women is, it shouldn't really matter. There are other fields where it's the other way around but yet we don't see initiatives in those fields to balance this inequality. And why should there be? It's not a bad thing. Gender shouldn't even matter in the first place. I think trying to "balance" gender inequality in a field just for the sake of balancing is stupid. (Of course I'm only talking about balancing the number of people in a particular field here, salary(etc..) equality is very much a good thing)
Apr 9, 2019 at 16:16 comment added TylerH @SombreroChicken You think it's "natural" that the field of programming has more men or women? Considering you just need a brain and an input method, I don't think there's anything natural about a large imbalance in either direction. And given the worldwide movement over the last several decades of increasing equality in the workplace and on the internet, I think it should be obvious why there's a focus on weighing results based on gender.
Apr 9, 2019 at 16:14 comment added TylerH I half-think we should ask for W-2 uploads next year; seems like a lot of people are fibbing their salaries by a wide margin, at least in the US. I mean, academic researchers drawing in a $95k salary as a median? Or maybe there's just one or two people making half a million dollars in that field somewhere that skewed the results way up (so maybe we should throw out the outliers and use the mean, instead?)
Apr 9, 2019 at 15:54 answer added The Guy with The Hat timeline score: 13
Apr 9, 2019 at 15:48 comment added Jeutnarg I'm surprised at how many transgender-identifying people responded to the survey. 1.2% is a really high percentage for that demographic.
Apr 9, 2019 at 15:42 answer added ohmu timeline score: -7
Apr 9, 2019 at 15:35 comment added dwirony Is VBA really that much of a "dreaded" language? I feel like "Dread" <> "Not interested in continuing use". Strange word choice...
Apr 9, 2019 at 15:11 comment added Adriaan I'm not surprised that a lot of academic researchers are actively looking for jobs, as a PhD candidate, and most Post-Doc positions as well, are fixed-term (couple of years usually), with possibly students thrown in the mix as well. Meaning they'll have to move after their project/time/contract expires.
Apr 9, 2019 at 15:09 comment added Hatted Rooster Why are so many results and categories based on gender? That really bothers me. Some fields of work have more women in them, some have more men, it's natural. I dislike this forceful display of "Look guys more women are active than last year, we're doing good!".
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:58 comment added Ryan Lundy "Germany has an unusually high proportion of developers working part-time." In Germany, Switzerland, and perhaps other places in Europe, one can work in percentages. For instance, many developers in my office work 80%, which means they work 80% of the hours (here in Switzerland, 33.6 hours instead of a full 42) and take home 80% of a standard salary. These respondents are probably included in the count of part-time. Even a 90% worker might well consider him/herself part-time.
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:55 answer added pushkin timeline score: 22
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:51 comment added Wai Ha Lee I noticed that the results use "three-fourths" as opposed to (what sounds more natural to me) "three-quarters". Google's NGram viewer says that the term "three fourths" is used about one fourth as often as "three quarters". Neither is more correct, though.
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:48 comment added Adriaan @RyanLundy and it needs a breakdown or correction for average income per country in case of the global figures. Here in Switzerland the average salary is a lot higher than the average in India for example. In case this correction has already been done it should be mentioned.
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:47 comment added Adriaan "This is especially notable in countries like France and Germany, which are the 4th and 7th largest economies in the world, respectively." this implies France's economy is bigger than Germany, which it is certainly not. Rephrasing as "This is especially notable in countries like Germany and France, which are the 4th and 7th largest economies in the world, respectively." would be preferable IMO
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:45 comment added gtgaxiola I have never heard of Rust yet the community selected as the "most loved programming language"
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:39 comment added Ryan Lundy Languages associated with higher salaries... It would be interesting to see how it correlates with job titles. F# commands quite high salaries, for instance...but is that due to F# itself, or is it because the types of jobs in which F# is used happen to be much higher-paying than "average coder" jobs? It seems to me likely that the type of job is more relevant to salary than the language, and that the language follows from the job type.
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:38 comment added vaultah "This year 11% of US survey respondents are women, up from 9% on last year's survey." Phew, thank god -- the Welcome Wagon wasn't in vain.
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:28 comment added Ryan Lundy Curiously, the write-up about "Will People Born Today Have a Better Life Than Their Parents?" talked about it being a measure of optimism. I'm not sure that follows. If you answered "No," it doesn't necessarily mean you think things will be worse for people born today than for their parents. It could just mean they think things will stay roughly the same. I wouldn't call that a lack of optimism. Maybe in Western Europe, for instance, conditions are good enough that people don't feel the need for things to improve?
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:22 comment added Ryan Lundy "I am unable to / find it difficult to type - 0.3%" It would be interesting next year to ask about the number of developers who could type (that is, who have the use of all ten fingers) but don't. I'm continually amazed at the number of people who code for a living but never bothered to learn ten-finger typing, and who do all their coding with two or four fingers.
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:09 comment added Joe W I am impressed by the number of people with 50+ years of experience, and wasn't expecting it to be that high.
Apr 9, 2019 at 14:05 history asked Anita TaylorStaff CC BY-SA 4.0