Please don't take this merely as a critique, but:
We did our best to take all your ideas into consideration while balancing them with the length of the survey and our ability to measure key insights.
It seems like none of the top-voted questions proposed in the topic suggestion post have been taken into account (actually, it seems like basically none of the proposed questions were considered):
- How often are you required by your employer to work overtime without proper overtime pay or compensatory time? **
- How often do you exercise or play sports? *
- How long does it take you to get to work in minutes?
- How many computer monitors are you using for your job?
- If you were looking for a job, how much time (in days) of remote work would you want to be allowed to do? *
- Which beverage do you turn into code?
- Does your company store sensitive information (password, card numbers, etc...) of customers in plain text? **
- How much time do you spend a week programming on non-work related projects (e.g. hobby projects, open source...)?
- You are put in a room with 100 random developers who have similar roles to you. Given the traits you value in a strong developer, how many do you think are better developers than you? ***
- What is your opinion on open plan workspaces? *
- What do you listen to while you work?
- If you lost access to online help/documentation for one workday, could you still develop without using Google, online documentation, or SO? ***
- Which of the following problems do you repeatedly encounter? **
Some of them were pretty interesting, at least IMHO (I have marked them with asterisks). Why didn't any of these proposed question make it to the survey?
Also, still from the suggestions post:
We are always on the lookout for fun/silly questions, in the tradition of have you tried turning it off and on again and tabs vs. spaces.
I didn't notice any this year :( any reason for that? I've seen some suggestions that would have made sense for this purpose (e.g. one, two).