I just read a Medium essay by Amber Yust (Amber) about being offered Stack Overflow swag as a top 100 reputation user. She was initially disappointed that the choice of t-shirt size did not include women's sizes, a pet peeve of female programmers (including myself). She was pleasantly surprised to receive an apology from Jay Hanlon (Jaydles), Stack Exchange VP of Community Growth, ultimately followed by an appropriately fitting t-shirt. Amber concludes:
This is one “nerd shirt” (as one of my friends refers to tech company logo shirts) that I will definitely wear. I’m proud of the Stack Exchange folks for doing the right thing in this case, and I hope other companies will follow in their footsteps.
I wanted to share the kudos with the Stack Overflow community, as well as my own experience that Stack Overflow is a safe place for women to use their real identities, something I've told my primarily female students. (This post describes why I would not advise that for some other programmer forums.) I credit the moderation system, which is both well designed and applied.
I had trouble coming up with a title for this post, since the main benefit of Stack Overflow to female programmers is the same as that for all programmers: answers to technical questions. (Substitute programming for videogames in the following cartoon.)
To make this more of a discussion, I'll ask this question: In what other ways does Stack Overflow do a better job (or could it do a better job) at being welcoming to women (or other people who sometimes feel unsafe or unwelcome at other programming sites)?