256
votes

[Edit: The survey is now closed]

It’s that time of year again—the annual developer survey is now open!

The survey will be open for three weeks starting today, and will tentatively close on January 26th.

As in previous years, anonymized results of the survey will be made publicly available under the Open Database License. We encourage you to download and analyze the dataset yourself when it becomes available.

On that note, throughout the survey, certain answers you and your peers give will be treated as personally identifiable information, and therefore kept out of the anonymized results file. We'll call out each of those in the survey with a note saying "This information will be kept private."

We've made this year's survey short (and by short we mean somewhat-freaking-long), but we've done our absolute best to be respectful of the time you're giving by taking the survey. If you have any questions or feedback in general, we'd love to hear it, just post an answer or comment as you deem appropriate. Thanks again to everyone, and happy new year!

Take the Survey Now

76
  • 35
    I'm looking forward to seeing the results again this year. P.S I liked the section on asking us if we're worried about Skynet.
    – George
    Jan 8, 2018 at 14:10
  • 140
    You lost me at "should take about 30 minutes"... is this survey aimed at the unemployed?
    – musefan
    Jan 8, 2018 at 14:23
  • 139
    There really should be more frequently a "I have no idea how to answer that" especially when the question is US culture oriented or any other reason the question feels very alien to your activity. Jan 8, 2018 at 14:39
  • 30
    “How many monitors are set up at your workstation?” – At home, I have a very large monitor that is bigger than my multi-monitor setup at work. So this question does not really tell much about the work environment. It should rather ask for the total pixel space or something.
    – poke
    Jan 8, 2018 at 14:49
  • 37
    Have you considered doing testing with external users before going live, instead of only doing in-house testing? Every year multiple issues are reported shortly after the survey going live, it's unfortunate this mistake is made every time.
    – user247702
    Jan 8, 2018 at 15:21
  • 193
    Why were there so many questions about advertisement? Is this whole survey thing just a cover for you to evaluate how to improve your advertising revenue? Because that's exactly how it felt after 3 pages of asking about my advertising preferences and habits...
    – musefan
    Jan 8, 2018 at 15:26
  • 72
    Next year, please do some QA including non-US testers before releasing the survey. I was struggling with a lot of questions. Unfortunately, I can no longer view the survey, because I have already finished it. So I can't provide more detailed feedback :(
    – honk
    Jan 8, 2018 at 15:38
  • 53
    No opportunity to get swag by guessing coins, M&M's or whatnot? Terrible tradition-breaker :-( Jan 8, 2018 at 16:31
  • 45
    The primary purpose of the survey has always been about improving our ability to serve relevant advertising, @musefan. We've expanded it considerably over the past 7 years to try to make the results more generally useful and interesting, and last year's results seem to have been widely successful in achieving that secondary goal, but that core need remains in place - IMHO, that's a far better bargain than the sorts of intrusive analytics (with secret results) that certain other sites use for this purpose.
    – Shog9
    Jan 8, 2018 at 16:50
  • 55
    Why do you want to know my sexual preference?
    – Tim
    Jan 8, 2018 at 17:51
  • 89
    You mean you're not on Stack Overflow Dating yet @TimCastelijns? Jan 8, 2018 at 18:28
  • 83
    Missing Option: I use an adblocker for security. The reason I use an adblocker has nothing to do with how I feel about ads, and 100% because ad networks are malicious code vectors. Jan 8, 2018 at 20:21
  • 49
    While this doesn't really apply to SO, the whole section on advertising is hopelessly skewed by leaving users unable to report what is most probably the #1 most hated thing about online advertising: it's frequently intrusive and extremely annoying. Does that mean it's not "trustworthy" or "honest about its goals"? I don't know, but if you make my speakers blare at 90dB uninvited I don't really care if I like your company or you avoid fluffy language. Jan 8, 2018 at 22:03
  • 41
    Also to reiterate @JoelAnderson's point, adblockers are about security, period. There is no whitelisting or trusted sites or "oh that site's mainstream so they won't have malicious code". Companies have shown again and again they don't police their ad networks: twitter.com/SwiftOnSecurity/status/950088799014572034 Jan 8, 2018 at 22:08
  • 44
    Gave up at the "rank these 10/11 items in order" questions: most I don't care about enough to rank, so the results would be random/meaningless. The old format, where you gave a ranking to only as many as you wanted was much better. If you must show off your "look, we can do drag-and-drop JS/CSS" skills, add an "I don't care below this entry" option that can be dragged to the appropriate place.
    – TripeHound
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:25

46 Answers 46

1
2
9
votes

In previous surveys I was asked to optionally share my Stack Overflow user id. However, this time that was not requested.

An email was requested optionally at the end of the survey. Is this used as an attempt to tie into my Stack Overflow account? What if the email given was not associated with my account? Was my account automatically associated due to being currently logged in?

4
  • The request for your email was, as it said ("Please share the best email address at which to contact you for further research"), for research purposes. We occasionally like to speak directly with developers to learn more about developer opinions, and that's what we use the research list for. At the end of the survey, you were automatically linked back to SO and if you were logged in, you were assigned the silver badge. If you were not logged in, you would be prompted to log in. Jan 8, 2018 at 21:15
  • 3
    That part was rather straightforward, however I was mostly curious about whether or not the data was associated with my Stack Overflow account directly, as I was under the impression that in past years if I had opted in to include my user id it was. Not that I mind either way, I was just curious if that was still the situation.
    – Travis J
    Jan 8, 2018 at 21:41
  • 2
    Ah, no, the survey data is not associated in our databases together with your account. The two data sources are separate and are not used together. Jan 8, 2018 at 21:45
  • 1
    Data is not associated with your account (source)
    – DavidG
    Jan 9, 2018 at 1:14
8
votes

Some technical issues (based on the Holy Handgranade of methodology in German Schnell, Rainer ; Hill, Paul B ; Esser, Elke: Methoden der empirischen Sozialforschung. München: Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2011 which isn't necessary for the marketing survery, but it's hard to do things badly on purpose if you have an idea how to do them right):

  • All questions should have the possibility to answer "I don't know" and "I don't won't to answer" (there's a difference between both, so you need both of them). The fact that you can click next without selecting is not intuitive.
  • The education of parents needs to be recorded separately for mother and father (including the options mentioned above).
  • Multi-select checkboxes with one option "None of the above" don't make sense because "None of the above" and [one of the above] is never true.
  • People contributing to the survey should be given the possibility to critique the survey at the end. It's considered polite.

Well trained sociology students probably know that and you should contact some of them before starting another survey. They can consult you in questions of dramaturgy and the right item scales (I'm not a professional, but I couldn't recognize any potential use for the generated data).

1
  • I'll give special emphasis on the separation of the mother and father education. Not only that, it's extremely hard for a non-US person to select options that make sense in the US. I won't translate every single option to then have to check what's the equivalent in my country Jan 10, 2018 at 14:12
7
votes

The survey is missing "Prev" (or "Back" buttons) on the following questions:

  • "In which country do you currently reside?"
  • The page about college majors, industry / organization size, how long have you been coding
  • "This section will focus on Stack Overflow usage and community questions"
  • "If you could change anything about Stack Overflow, what would it be?"

Also, you can't clear the answer for "What is the highest level of education received by either of your parents? If you prefer not to answer, you may leave this question blank." It should have an option for "I prefer not to answer" like the other radio button questions on that page.

1
  • 2
    and in one of these questions - I hit the back button and bam all my half an hour's worth of effort disappeared. The worst ever user experience design. Many of the questions had missing checkboxes.
    – bhaskarc
    Jan 9, 2018 at 16:55
6
votes

This was mentioned briefly in another answer, but I want to call it out explicitly as well. I have no idea how to answer "Think back to the last time you updated your resumé, CV, or an online profile on a job site. What is the main reason that you did so?"

enter image description here

None of those options apply at all, as I generally update my CV when something happens that's worth adding to it... which is what happened last time. I don't know if it's really feasible to enumerate every possible scenario here, but a "none of the above" option or, as suggested in the comments, "I regularly make changes to my resume to keep it up to date" would be great next year.

4
  • I agree, though I do think "I regularly make changes to my resume to keep it up to date" should also be an option.
    – BSMP
    Jan 26, 2018 at 4:03
  • @BSMP Yeah, for sure. I added that to my answer.
    – Adam Lear StaffMod
    Jan 26, 2018 at 5:36
  • Huh? What's wrong with "My job status or other personal status changed" then? I don't see the problem, TBH.
    – Mr Lister
    Jan 28, 2018 at 10:50
  • 1
    @MrLister "I built something cool" isn't what comes to mind when I think of a "job status change".
    – Adam Lear StaffMod
    Jan 28, 2018 at 18:58
5
votes

Questions I found difficult to answer

In a typical week, how many times do you exercise?

How do you define one unit of exercise? Walking up the stairs? Walking my kids to nursery? Scooting to work? Or does only a gym session count?

How satisfied are you with your current job?

There are many different aspects to jobs and I personally find it very difficult to sum up the different conflicting feelings I have.

Which of the following best describes what you hope to be doing in five years?

I wasn't sure how realistic I was supposed to be here, the range from most likely to fantasy is quite broad.

2
  • Questions in a survey need a certain level of simplification, especially with the total amount of time spent on the survey or social desirability bias in mind. Given the mistakes that SO made and that could be avoided/fixed by a few sociology students in 4th semester given 50$ each, I can't estimate if it's on purpose or not, but it makes other aspects more difficult otherwise. Jan 10, 2018 at 1:08
  • I think you're overthinking it. Would you tell someone "yep, I exercised today" if you walked up a flight of stairs? If a casual acquaintance said "Do you like your job?" would you answer yes/no/kinda? And they asked "hope to be doing", not "what do you actually see yourself doing".
    – user812786
    Jan 11, 2018 at 14:49
5
votes

Please add the ability to resume the survey later.Because it lasts too long and I had to close it after 10 minutes in the first try, when I want to enter again Survey began start from 0.

An example: I start to survey, after 15 min i need to go, and close survey page(computer turned off ). Then i want to continue the survey its not possible.

4
votes

So many ads questions (I don't really mind, though), I felt one was missing:

Do you use your Reduce Ads privilege?

I'd find it interesting because I don't use it and have Adblock and Adblock Plus disabled explicitly for the Stack Exchange network (some ads have actually been useful)

6
  • 6
    I guess they can see that information from the database though Jan 8, 2018 at 19:48
  • 1
    @AshleyMedway How often I'm active and the amount of activity also, and it's still asked... Jan 8, 2018 at 19:50
  • I see your point, maybe there's some value in how active you are VS how active you believe you are? Jan 8, 2018 at 19:51
  • Wait, you can toggle that? Jan 8, 2018 at 19:56
  • @BlackVegetable Yes, in your preferences Jan 8, 2018 at 19:58
  • 1
    @AshleyMedway Except for the claim (both in the survey, comments on this question, and in other questions) that the survey is not linked to your SO account. So they couldn't correlate the other ad questions with the setting.
    – Izkata
    Jan 10, 2018 at 19:18
3
votes

I started answering the questions until the section speaking about Advertising. This section is expensive and asks a lot of questions. I dropped all out and close the survey whiteout submitting anything.
If you want to do -like others do- a commercial/financial survey for SO, you can do it separately and keep this one technically as possible.

7
  • 8
    As linked elsewhere (but not visibly enough!) this survey has always been about advertising on SO to begin with: stackoverflow.blog/2010/12/21/stack-overflow-annual-survey Jan 8, 2018 at 17:03
  • 2
    And why you ask technical questions so? it is a bait?
    – Phiber
    Jan 8, 2018 at 21:00
  • 1
    You have a huge outreach to people willing to answer questions and interested in results. Why just make it an advertisement thing if you can get other answers too?
    – LW001
    Jan 9, 2018 at 22:28
  • "whiteout submitting anything": Don't be so sure about that. All your answers are registered ;-)
    – Cerbrus
    Jan 10, 2018 at 14:49
  • @Cerbrus I thought responses are local and there are some Submit Button at the end (which I not reached). Anyway Adblock do job ;)
    – Phiber
    Jan 10, 2018 at 16:19
  • Adblock doesn’t block any of that.
    – Cerbrus
    Jan 10, 2018 at 16:46
  • @Cerbrus you must read between lines...
    – Phiber
    Jan 10, 2018 at 17:37
3
votes

On the question "Which development environment(s) do you use regularly?" the option "Xcode" has an incorrectly capitalised 'C'.

3
votes

I didn't write down all exact wordings as I was afraid of hitting back (and revisiting the questionnaire might skew the results even more, but there are many answers in this thread already discussing skewed results), but here are some of my thoughts about some questions and how to maybe improve them.


The question "I am not as good at programming as my peers" is no rating but a yes/no question, which doesn't even provide any meaningful insights because it eventually boils down to an almost forced-choice into "fully agree".

Either you are at the same level as your peers, at which point you have to strongly disagree with the sentence, or you are not, then you have to fully agree with the sentence.

If you are at the exact same level as your peers, then this question is fine. If there is at least one peer who is better or worse than you, you have to fully agree with this sentence. Since it is highly unlikely that all of your peers are at the exact same level as you, the only rational choice left to answer is "fully agree".

On the other hand, if we try to argue what "being good at programming" means, this question gets even worse. Does being good mean being able to write software faster? More reliable? Better tested? More readable code? With more detailed documentation? To the point? Or is it more about the ability of abstract thinking? Solving problems? Is a peer better in programming than me (or worse than me) if I can only write my little Python data analysis script while she writes enterprise Java software, while neither of us could do the other person's job, because she knows how to do OOP and GUI and whatever programming in Java but has no clue about how to vectorize a call for numpy?

To improve this question it should be outlined what "being as good as" means exactly about the relation between me and my peers. Additionally the negation should be removed, it is much more difficult to understand and I almost accidentaly clicked "fully disagree" despite my thourogh analysis of the question. Also the question could be more meaningful if asked whether a persons sees him- or herself as being "better" (whatever this means) than peers, or worse. This could even be split in two. But I dislike those rating scales anyway, as they are almost always ill-defined.


The list of programming, markup, and scripting languages is arbitrary. There was e.g. HTML in there, but Markdown, which every stackoverflow contributor uses every now and then, was not listed. Or RST. Or something like yaml. In academia, LaTeX is quite common. "Extensive development" (or coding or something like that was mentioned) might or might not mean that it actually should perform some computations or whatsoever – but then, why mention markup languages in the first place?

I missed a lot of frameworks, tools, etc. which are used in academia (and also outside). Sure, there was a mention of Matlab – but there's also Octave. Tensorflow and PyTorch were mentioned – what about keras and caffe? What about OpenCV and dlib? Even for more industry-related tools there are flaws: We got React, but what about vuejs? Or simpler, what about things like bootstrap? There are many other answers in this thread arguing about that, so I won't continue more here.

I feel like the best way to go would have been to either provide far more exhaustive lists or to provide no lists at all and just give users an option to write down as many programming languages, scripting languages, markup languages, frameworks, tools, database systems, etc. as they liked.


My "workstation" is a difficult concept. I do have a desktop at home at which I sometimes work to test things on Windows. It also dual boots to linux. It has two monitors. But I also have a place in the university office where I can either use the linux machine there (using two monitors) or even hook up the two monitors to my Macbook (effectively ending up with three monitors). Then again, after lunch I often stay in the cafeteria, have a chat and then work there, effectively putting my "workstation" into a one-monitor-macbook. So "it varies from 1 to 3 monitors, depending on the circumstances" is a much better description of my workstation setup. And I guess it's similar to other people as well, as they will have company laptop they can take around and sit in some cozy corners, or at their desks with multiple monitors, or at a coffee shop, etc. – at least that's what I did in the past.

So the questionnaire should treat modern flexible work environments a little bit better, work from home, in the office, with a fixed desk, etc. etc.


The notion of "work" vs. "being a student" is a big issue throughout the questionnaire. Lots of "work" questions apply to being a student, but for example many students do not have a salary (I said my salary is 0 monthly, but technically all three answers would have applied).

It might make sense to distinguish more between different types of work, e.g. paid/unpaid or hobby/student/academics/business, ...

5
  • 3
    You know, instead of the questionnaire being wrong, maybe you're not exactly the target audience? They can't cover all possible cases...
    – Cerbrus
    Jan 10, 2018 at 14:44
  • 1
    Indeed, that is not impossible, but mind: "The Stack Overflow Developer Survey is for those who write code as a hobbyist, student, or professional.", as is written if you answer the initial questions with "None of these" and two "No"s. I also don't argue that the questionnaire is wrong in general (although the "I am not as good at programming as my peers" question reads weird), but pointed out some possible improvements to really cover students. But if the questionnaire is only posed for people who are working with industry frameworks on a paycheck in the US, then I'm not the target audience. Jan 10, 2018 at 18:25
  • I will remove the section about the first question though, as I tried again how it really works and even with "None of these" I would have been able to participate (because the other two options apply). Jan 10, 2018 at 18:28
  • I read the "I am not as good at programming as my peers" question as one about confidence and not objective ability. Even if it's really about ability you can still use the range to set your ability, ie, strongly disagree = I am better than my peers, disagree = I am as good as my peers, etc. Jan 11, 2018 at 10:35
  • The problem is not the objective ability or subjective confidence, but the ambiguity. I could also say "strongly disagree" for "worse than my peers", because "as good as" is agreeable, if and only if you are exactly as good as, otherwise you have to disagree. No matter into which direction you deviate. And of course, with the negation this changes and becomes more complex. Jan 11, 2018 at 13:50
1
vote

Anonymous or not, don't ask for my sexual orientation. I know it was made very clear I didn't have to answer, but it still rubs me the wrong way to be asked.


I find the question extremely personal, more than anything else. Personal questions such as age, wage or having children are relevant; however, I feel that asking my sexual orientation is akin to asking whether I'm a virgin or not, or what my fetishes are. It's truly personal, and rude to even ask (regardless of whether I can give no answer).

As Vincent has pointed out in the comments, perhaps it's simply to gauge how welcoming SO is, but it's also made clear that the survey is about marketing.

5
  • 4
    Why? You could just skip the question silently, instead you announce it in public and without any valid arguments (it rubs you?). I personally very curious in the number of females programmers, working with one is an experience I didn't have yet, must be a reason, maybe I should switch from C# to java or who knows...
    – Sinatr
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:24
  • 17
    I'm not talking about gender, I'm talking about sexual orientation. I don't mind the question about gender, because I can envision some stats on that. What are they hoping to see with sexual orientation? 3% of Ruby programmers are gay? 10% of C++ programmers are queer? Why is that useful? Note the OP says "If you have any questions or feedback in general, we'd love to hear it, just post an answer or comment" which I've done. I felt it was valid feedback, but if not it can be deleted as not an answer.
    – Tas
    Jan 9, 2018 at 9:26
  • 3
    @Tas It can be a way to investigate how welcome non-straight people feel in the SO community. If very few people were to check one of the corresponding boxes, it would be a clue that the situation is unsatisfying (though other reasons may have one not doing so).
    – Vincent
    Jan 9, 2018 at 13:38
  • 2
    @Tas I am French, and such questions are forbidden in France. I too used to be appaled when confronted with them. But not asking them often results in the denying of issues and the impossibility to factually document discriminations. I don't know what SO will actually do with this information, but it might be why they asked. Of course, it was absolutely legitimate of you not willing to answer.
    – Vincent
    Jan 9, 2018 at 13:49
  • @Tas Soon c++ programmers will start receiving more ads towards queers Jan 10, 2018 at 14:01
0
votes

After selecting £ as my currency, when I submitted X,000 as my salary I was told that I couldn't have "more than two decimals". I didn't save the exact error, but it struck me as weird.

10
  • Sometimes the thousand separator is a , and other times a . Same goes for decimals. Maybe the system was taking your thousand separator to be a decimal point?
    – CalvT
    Jan 8, 2018 at 18:04
  • Yes, same issue with euros. I was amused that some people would put decimals when giving their salaries more than anything :D Jan 8, 2018 at 19:00
  • I got the same error when selecting dollars. I'm not aware of any locale which uses dollars as their primary currency and , as the decimal separator. Jan 8, 2018 at 19:29
  • 18
    It clearly states 'without any punctuation', just type an integer.
    – Mixxiphoid
    Jan 8, 2018 at 21:21
  • 1
    @Mixxiphoid But the decimal point/comma isn't punctuation, it's part of the number. And if "without any punctuation" does mean you cannot have any non-digit characters, then how do you enter the two decimals that are (apparently) allowed?
    – TripeHound
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:07
  • 4
    @TripeHound, punctuation = inserting points or other small marks into texts, in order to aid interpretation. If you are asked to "enter number without punctuation", that clearly means just one thing: only digits are allowed.
    – Sinatr
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:12
  • 3
    @Sinatr The thousands separator clearly counts as punctuation: 1,000,000 or 1.000.000 is clearly easier to interpret than 1000000. However, I'd contend that the decimal separator is more than just an aid to interpretation, it is a integral part of non-integer numbers. The fact that there's a limit of two decimals implies you are allowed to use such numbers (if you're not allowed to specify decimal places, the error message is wrong and the original label should have been "In whole numbers without punctuation.").
    – TripeHound
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:33
  • 1
    @TripeHound, "is clearly easier to interpret" - yes, for a human. Survey data will be collected and presented in human-readable way don't have doubts. What they try to avoid (as it seems to me) is to implement parsing for this field. For me it's totally ok to ask another programmer for thing like this: "Hey, do me a favor, I don't want to spend my time on this, can you enter salary as a number please". Selling such survey to a normal user (non-programmer) would not be acceptable and I am a bit surprised you are trying to act as one.
    – Sinatr
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:39
  • @Sinatr Believe me, I'm acting as a "pedantic programmer", not a "normal user" :-). You asserted that punctuation = marks ... to aid interpretation and I agree that a thousands separator is such a mark (whether used on input or output). The decimal separator is not an aid to interpretation, but an integral part of it (1.00 or 1,00 is different to 100, not just easier to interpret). [cont]
    – TripeHound
    Jan 9, 2018 at 8:58
  • 3
    [...] The problem with the survey is that while it (not unreasonably) seeks to ban punctuation (=000s separator), it apparently accepts values to two decimal places (given the original error message). One reason to bar the 000s separator is the comma/point problem, but by accepting decimal places, it persists (in the OP's case, either their locale indicates the decimal separator is a comma, or the parsing code assumes it might be). The sensible thing is to only accept whole numbers (without punctuation or decimal separator), but the original error message suggests they're not doing this.
    – TripeHound
    Jan 9, 2018 at 9:02
0
votes

I am all set to start my journey with 2018 Developer Survey now. But I wonder why no heading on the survey preface page?

2018 Developer Survey

-5
votes

I did not get to do the survey. I am doing coding to find a job, therefore I did not click that I am a professional. Since I want to earn money from it I did not choose hobby too. The survey closed for me after this stating I should either code as a hobby or as a proffesional. Not able to reopen and edit.

2
  • 1
    I think if you are coding or studying with the intention of making it your career, it would be considered professional. If you have another career, or just don't intend to make programming a career, it would be considered a hobby (likely even if you make money off it)
    – Tas
    Jan 18, 2018 at 4:30
  • Well I cannot undo it now. I think I am leaving it at that. I also find it difficult not to connect money with being a professional. Thanks anyway for your two cents.
    – Meenohara
    Jan 19, 2018 at 7:23
-5
votes

Can we have more questions on diversity in teams?

-19
votes

Why are there so many questions about ads? I had to quit the survey.

1
1
2

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