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David Staff
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What is "Worked With vs. Want to Work With" and "Most loved, dreaded, and wanted" in the Developer Survey results?

In our annual 2021 Developer Survey results, we introduced a new section to the Technology chapter of our annual Developer Survey results. We titled this section Worked With vs. Want to Work With. Our hope with this section is to expand on the popular Most Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted section (first introduced in 2015) by showing precisely what developers used in the past year and what they want to work with in the following year at a granular level.

What is "Worked With vs. Want to Work With" in the Developer Survey results?

In our annual 2021 Developer Survey results, we introduced a new section to the Technology chapter. We titled this section Worked With vs. Want to Work With. Our hope with this section is to expand on the popular Most Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted section by showing precisely what developers used in the past year and what they want to work with in the following year at a granular level.

What is "Worked With vs. Want to Work With" and "Most loved, dreaded, and wanted" in the Developer Survey results?

In 2021 we introduced a new section to the Technology chapter of our annual Developer Survey results. We titled this section Worked With vs. Want to Work With. Our hope with this section is to expand on the popular Most Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted section (first introduced in 2015) by showing precisely what developers used in the past year and what they want to work with in the following year at a granular level.

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Improve title, minor copy edits for clarity, clean up mangled link syntax, add image alt text
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zcoop98
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What is "Worked With vs. Want to Work With" and "Loved, Dreaded, Wanted"in the Developer Survey results?

In our annual 2021 Developer Survey results, we introduceintroduced a new section to the Technology chapter. We titled this section Worked With vs. Want to Work With. Our hope with this section is to expand on the popular Most Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted section but showby showing precisely what developers used in the past year and what they want to work with in the following year at a granular level.

This post aims to clearly explain Worked With vs. Want to Work With and how to interpret the visualization we chose. It can also explain the intuition behind Loved"Loved, Dreaded, and WantedWanted" if this is your first time reading our survey results.

Refresher on Loved"Loved, Dreaded, and WantedWanted"

Before jumping into how to interpret the visualization let's have a quick refresher on how we structure our survey and what in the world LoveLove, Dread, and Want mean.

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)Screenshot of "worked with in past year"/ "want to work with next year" survey section, and colored markup indicating that lines with only a "past year" selection are categorized as "Dreaded", lines with just "next year" selected are "Wanted", and lines with both selected are "Loved"

Above we are looking at the database question. You can see that there are multiple databases listed and the survey respondent can choose what databases that havethey have worked with and the ones they wantwant to work with.

We defined the categories as follows:

In the above example, you can see that Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted can only describe a single database. But we can plainly see that this respondent wants to move away from MariaDB and continuing, continue using MySQL, and start using Redis.

When highlighting a single path we can see it's from and to databases. Here we see that 5,120 respondents worked with MariaDB this year but wantwanted to work with MySQL next year.

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)Chord diagram with the arc from MariaDB to MySQL highlighted

When hovering over a single database we can see all the paths that connect to it. It looks like MySQL has paths moving to every other database with the exception of Microsoft SQL Server. When looking at the different colorcolored paths we can see that only four databases are leading toto it (MariaDB, MongoDB, PostgresSQL, SQLite):

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)Chord diagram with all paths to/ from MySQL highlighted

If a path is from and to the same database then this is the equivalent of Loved because these developers are currently working in MySQL and want to continue working in MySQL:

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)Chord diagram with the self-referential arc on MySQL highlighted

What is "Worked With vs. Want to Work With" and "Loved, Dreaded, Wanted"?

In our annual 2021 Developer Survey results, we introduce a new section to the Technology chapter. We titled this section Worked With vs. Want to Work With. Our hope with this section is to expand on the popular Most Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted section but show precisely what developers used in the past year and what they want to work with in the following year at a granular level.

This post aims to clearly explain Worked With vs. Want to Work With and how to interpret the visualization we chose. It can also explain the intuition behind Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted if this is your first time reading our survey results.

Refresher on Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted

Before jumping into how to interpret the visualization let's have a quick refresher on how we structure our survey and what in the world Love, Dread and Want mean.

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)

Above we are looking at the database question. You can see that there are multiple databases listed and the survey respondent can choose what databases that have worked with and the ones they want to work with.

In the above example, you can see that Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted can only describe a single database. But we can plainly see that this respondent wants to move away from MariaDB and continuing using MySQL and start using Redis.

When highlighting a single path we can see it's from and to databases. Here we see that 5,120 respondents worked with MariaDB but want to work with MySQL next year.

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)

When hovering over a single database we can see all the paths that connect to it. It looks like MySQL has paths moving to every other database with the exception of Microsoft SQL Server. When looking at the different color paths we can see that only four databases are leading to it (MariaDB, MongoDB, PostgresSQL, SQLite)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)

If a path is from and to the same database then this is the equivalent of Loved because these developers are currently working in MySQL and want to continue working in MySQL

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)

What is "Worked With vs. Want to Work With" in the Developer Survey results?

In our annual 2021 Developer Survey results, we introduced a new section to the Technology chapter. We titled this section Worked With vs. Want to Work With. Our hope with this section is to expand on the popular Most Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted section by showing precisely what developers used in the past year and what they want to work with in the following year at a granular level.

This post aims to clearly explain Worked With vs. Want to Work With and how to interpret the visualization we chose. It can also explain the intuition behind "Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted" if this is your first time reading our survey results.

Refresher on "Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted"

Before jumping into how to interpret the visualization let's have a quick refresher on how we structure our survey and what in the world Love, Dread, and Want mean.

Screenshot of "worked with in past year"/ "want to work with next year" survey section, and colored markup indicating that lines with only a "past year" selection are categorized as "Dreaded", lines with just "next year" selected are "Wanted", and lines with both selected are "Loved"

Above we are looking at the database question. You can see that there are multiple databases listed and the survey respondent can choose what databases that they have worked with and the ones they want to work with.

We defined the categories as follows:

In the above example, you can see that Loved, Dreaded, and Wanted can only describe a single database. But we can plainly see that this respondent wants to move away from MariaDB, continue using MySQL, and start using Redis.

When highlighting a single path we can see it's from and to databases. Here we see that 5,120 respondents worked with MariaDB this year but wanted to work with MySQL next year.

Chord diagram with the arc from MariaDB to MySQL highlighted

When hovering over a single database we can see all the paths that connect to it. It looks like MySQL has paths moving to every other database with the exception of Microsoft SQL Server. When looking at the different colored paths we can see that only four databases are leading to it (MariaDB, MongoDB, PostgresSQL, SQLite):

Chord diagram with all paths to/ from MySQL highlighted

If a path is from and to the same database then this is the equivalent of Loved because these developers are currently working in MySQL and want to continue working in MySQL:

Chord diagram with the self-referential arc on MySQL highlighted

made images public
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David Staff
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[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/cce06de8-afa4-4154-bb50-42e600794e23.png)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/d00ce8f4-2a45-420c-a39a-7cec62f35e18.png)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/1c5a9cb4-5204-4889-b12e-d14d9815f0da.png)

[![](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)](https://stackoverflow.com/c/pickles/images/s/6ed9cc7b-ef68-4f5b-960c-6474b722f3dd.png)

Reorder first paragraphs for better context in reading
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Tomerikoo
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