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Our annual survey, now in its ninth year, launches today and anyone who codes is encouraged to participate. The survey will be open until February 12.

Take the survey

We heard you loud and clear when you asked for a shorter survey. We did our best to deliver without sacrificing valuable insight, and we shaved off about five minutes from last year’s survey. The survey should take about 25 minutes to complete.

Any user who completes the survey in its entirety will have the option to get the Census badge on Stack Overflow or a different technical site in the Stack Exchange network.

Keeping with tradition, anonymized survey results will be available publicly under the Open Database License. You’ll be able to download and analyze the dataset later this year. Certain survey answers are treated as personally identifiable information, and therefore excluded from the anonymized results. These questions are highlighted in the survey with a note saying, “This information will be kept private.”

Thanks in advance for your time and thoughtfulness.

If you use security or ad-blocking plugins, you may see error messages Our third-party software provider, Qualtrics, does not work well with certain ad blockers and security software. To avoid error messages that prevent you from taking the survey, please try specifically unblocking Qualtrics in your plugin or pausing the plugin while you take the survey.

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    @DanNeely In a very general way, but if in doubt, take it at home perhaps. As a manager I don't think there's anything that would worry me, but I have little experience being a crummy manager, so better to be safe.
    – Tim Post
    Jan 23, 2019 at 15:24
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    Have you tried turning it off and on again? Assuming it was related to the previous question, I tried to reboot my familly, but now it won't start up
    – jhamon
    Jan 23, 2019 at 15:41
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    Plenty of questions in here that are too vague, make no sense, and don't have appropriate options.
    – jhpratt
    Jan 23, 2019 at 15:44
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    The survey is not loading. I've been looking at a spinning thingamabob for a minute now. Is this just that too many people are trying to do the survey at the same time? Jan 23, 2019 at 15:45
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    @CrisLuengo Haven't been able to replicate that, and you are the only one so far who has surfaced that issue. Perhaps try refreshing? Jan 23, 2019 at 15:54
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    @AnitaTaylor good team work on the length of the survey, bravo! Delayed my snack time to do the survey, looking forward to the interesting results! PS: Bonus-my 100th silver badge :)
    – gsamaras
    Jan 23, 2019 at 15:55
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    @JeremyBanks We have heard the community loud and clear that our results do not represent ALL developers. We will be framing the results this year with that in mind. Jan 23, 2019 at 15:57
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    For anyone running into the same issue I have (survey not loading): Disabling content blockers did the trick for me. Jan 23, 2019 at 16:03
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    Skipping questions works 👍 I extensively tested it. On a more serious note, a lot of questions made me wonder as to what their relevance was.
    – Tim
    Jan 23, 2019 at 16:18
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    I would like to nominate myself for "who is going to be the most influential person in tech?". If elected, I promise to be influential. Please write in Evan Carroll -- two 'r's, two 'l's. All power to the people! Jan 23, 2019 at 17:15
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    The current line of questions and answers regarding mental health issues is a huge improvement in comparison to last year. Well done, and thank you!
    – roberrrt-s
    Jan 23, 2019 at 17:30
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    @Prune from opening it and looking at the 1st few screens it appears that it's entirely hosted on a single domain (ABP and privacy badger didn't find a thing); but since it's being run by an analytics company some people have probably blacklisted the domain itself and thus will have it go boom even directly on their site not just when it tries to load crap onto 3rd parties. I suspect it's mostly an issue for people who use hostfile blocking methods. Jan 23, 2019 at 18:39
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    @dwirony The survey this year is one of the shortest annual surveys I've taken at SO (and I've taken it at least for five years).
    – TylerH
    Jan 23, 2019 at 20:35
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    I'm the kind of person that thinks that if a site doesn't work while addblockers are turned on, it's a site I don't want to visit. Why not just make a survey without snooping on it's users?
    – Matty
    Jan 24, 2019 at 8:45
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    "Xcode" is still spelt like that. With a lower case C.
    – idmean
    Jan 24, 2019 at 13:57

31 Answers 31

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As an occasional user of Stack Overflow websites my greatest frustration is the zeal of moderators.

The website is elegant with little need for administration at all - content is easy to find, almost exclusively from google unless I fancy a little browsing for pleasure, in which case the similar q's links are great. The best content is naturally bubbled up to my attention via voting mechanism.

However, almost inevitably when I come across an interesting question, or am involved in discussion myself, the question is closed or answer removed with reference to some rules - off topic etc. Discouraging when you submit content, and frustrating when you'd like to see more in a discussion. Poor content will fade to the background anyway.... so why choke the site of the best ideas and deny its ability to evolve?

I am sure this particular thread breaks a bunch of rules as well, I'm surprised it has not been shut down.

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    I am sure this particular thread breaks a bunch of rules as well, I'm surprised it has not been shut down. This post is on meta, and meta is a lot more freeflowing. There are rules here of course as well, but the conventions of what is off topic, what is and isn't an answer, and format in general are a lot more relaxed here. On the main site it's different.
    – Magisch
    Jan 30, 2019 at 11:41
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    It should be noted that most of the actions you see are the results of fellow users actions, not moderators.\
    – Joe W
    Jan 30, 2019 at 13:47
  • Or rather, the site has a significant part of its moderation crowdsourced to the users. Which make it probably imperfect and not always consistent, but at least functioning
    – Pac0
    Jan 30, 2019 at 16:06
  • relevant about Magisch's comment : stackoverflow.com/help/whats-meta
    – Pac0
    Jan 30, 2019 at 16:07
  • @Andrew ignorance of the law is no excuse. Jan 31, 2019 at 7:21
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    There can be plenty of valuable posts that will still be deleted. Stack Overflow doesn't try to be everything to everyone; there's a very specific focus, and everything else falls by the wayside. That's why you have experts here, answering your questions. Remove those constraints, and you lose those experts, and then, yes, we become the next Twitter. That's not a good thing.
    – fbueckert
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:28
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    @fbueckert Tagging and other mechanisms do a wonderful job of filtering and searching for people to find relevant content. I don't agree that experts are here because there are not opinion based questions or whatever
    – Andrew
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:30
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    @fbueckert - Point taken, my concern is not the moderators, it is the rules they are actually encouraged to apply.
    – Andrew
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:36
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    Perhaps you should understand why we have the rules we do before you criticize them. Learning why we work the way we do is critical to that understanding. An analogy I've been using lately is that we're building a castle out of cabinets
    – fbueckert
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:38
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    Populated by bees? Lots of tasty metaphors going on there. I do my work here and I'm trying to share the frustration that I experience, probably as a more typical stackoverflow user than yourself. The magic of this wonderful castle is that it has cabinets that are linked straight into google searches without any effort whatsoever. Good answers to my questions are upvoted. I can see potential problems with some open ended questions but I think most cases will enrich that castle. You can disagree but the obvious unquestioning zeal with which people treat the rules is in my opinion unhelpful.
    – Andrew
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:48
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    Open ended questions attract low quality answers. They are the rickety cabinets. Allowing them would work against building a castle that withstands the test of time, and we'd have crumbling walls in no time. There's nothing wrong with challenging rules, but it needs to be done with the understanding that how it currently works ensures that the castle is still here, far into the future. If you're advocating for looser rules, you need to present a strong argument how that won't impact future viability. This just comes off as a rant, otherwise.
    – fbueckert
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:52
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    You are confident that relaxing rules will result in a loss of quality, is there any empirical evidence to support that conviction? I am confident that applying rules is constraining content because by definition that is what they are doing.
    – Andrew
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:56
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    That's easy; look at Yahoo Answers, or Quora. They're both Q&A, with less (if any) rules on what can be asked. Now ask yourself where you get better answers. I think you know the answer to that. And, yeah, the entire point of rules is to constrain content. Content that we've deemed is problematic and doesn't fit well into a Q&A format.
    – fbueckert
    Jan 31, 2019 at 14:57
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    That is interesting comparison, but I'm not convinced the key difference is rule application. Anyway - I can see there is not a lot of traction on this line of thinking so will drop off but good luck to you.
    – Andrew
    Jan 31, 2019 at 15:03
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    Partially, this is absolutely true, and some SE sites are worse than others. Partially, the content is easy to find and of high quality because of moderation. Google ranks sites and search results based on credibility.
    – Lundin
    Feb 1, 2019 at 7:58
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