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The 2017 Developer Survey had two questions (How long since you first learned to code? How long have you been coding professionally?) for which the answers topped out at 20+ years. Since a lot of us started coding at 12, and the median age from last year's survey was 27, I'm predicting that about 40% of the respondents will choose 20+ for the first question, and about 25% will choose 20+ for the second.

If it's important to know the difference between 17 years and 18, that's fine, but I propose that we also split "20+" into:

  • 20-24 years
  • 25-29 years
  • 30-39 years
  • 40-49 years
  • 50-59 years
  • 60-69 years
  • 70+ years (I am Grace Hopper!)
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    Or they could just make it a slider like a couple of the other questions. Jan 12, 2017 at 20:28
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    Perhaps the point is that after 20+ years, it doesn't really matter. You've been doing it long enough to get all the acclaim possible. Do we really need more granularity here? Jan 13, 2017 at 5:23
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    Depends on the point of the question. Why have 20 buckets below 20, and then lump the other 25-40% into a single bucket?
    – shoover
    Jan 13, 2017 at 5:28
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    upvoted because I want to be able to eventually state that I started coding 70 years ago. Another option needed is "I forgot"
    – gnat
    Jan 13, 2017 at 6:42
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    @gnat: Same thing, right? ;) Jan 14, 2017 at 2:36
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    Because of this, I felt old for the first time in my life while answering this question...
    – koalo
    Jan 14, 2017 at 15:11

2 Answers 2

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Why so many when you could do it yourself?

There are two ways to remove all the options and replace it with something where the survey taker manually inputs the year ranges. One is like what @NathanOlvier suggested, which is just a slider:

Or they could just make it a slider like a couple of the other questions.

Or you could make a text box where the user inputs a number. But due to extra checking for an actual number inputted, I believe the slider option would be optimal and would prevent troll answers (i.e. 1000 years of experience).

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  • Troll answers could easily be disregarded by not allowing the user to enter a value higher than, say 60, and lower than perhaps 1.
    – fi12
    Jan 14, 2017 at 2:10
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    You do not need any additional extra checks by using HTML's type="number". It also natively supports min, max and step. Browsers will automatically report an invalid number. So there are no technical difficulties here at all. (The same goes with type="range" -- it acts exactly as type="number", so it's just a different visual representation of the same thing.) Jan 14, 2017 at 12:04
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Thanks for this suggestion. On last year's survey we "topped out" at 11 or more years; this year we essentially doubled the range. We'll be looking at the data to see if there are "buckets" in the high range that make sense from an analysis perspective.

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    Consider that capturing the actual number lets you re-bin the data at a future date when you dream up a new analysis angle. Jan 15, 2017 at 0:13

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