Timeline for How does the Developer Survey calculate "Admired" vs "Desired"?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
7 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jul 30 at 15:53 | comment | added | Erin Asks Staff | The denominator for "Desired" is out of total unique respondents for that particular question, the denominator for "Admired" is the total unique respondents that indicated they used the technology in the past year. | |
Jul 27 at 8:32 | comment | added | Soonts | @MrDeveloper It’s not total count of respondents, if it would be we would see very small percentage for exotic languages like Nim. It’s not count of respondents for a particular language either because admired/desired numbers don’t add to 100%, the sum is 111% for Rust and 51.4% for Nim. | |
Jul 26 at 21:32 | comment | added | MrDeveloper | @Soonts my two cents is that the denominator is the number of devs either that took the survey as a whole, assuming this was a select-multiple question on the survey. If not, then the number of devs that answered the question of yes/no desired for each language. | |
Jul 26 at 20:46 | comment | added | zcoop98 | You know what, it looks like this might be a little more nuanced than I first thought; I suspect, if it's more complicated than a straight percentage of all respondents like you're saying, that the "admired" percentage is out of people using the technology, rather than all respondents (or ones who answered the question), but I'll gladly dig into it to double check in a bit. | |
Jul 26 at 20:29 | comment | added | Soonts | And another, related interesting question. Why is their admired percentage greater than desired even for unpopular languages like Visual Basic, VBA, or PHP? | |
Jul 26 at 20:24 | comment | added | Soonts | Your answer would make sense if they would report count of people. Instead, they are reporting percentages. The key question is, what was the denominator while calculating these percentages? | |
Jul 26 at 20:05 | history | answered | zcoop98 | CC BY-SA 4.0 |