241

I’m Anita, a Product Manager here at Stack Overflow.

We are starting to work on the questionnaire for the 2020 Developer Survey. Thanks to you, we had some great questions in the 2019 survey, such as:

(Check out the results from the 2019 survey if you haven’t already.)

We'd love to get your suggestions for compelling topics we should cover this year.

We are aiming for a much shorter survey this year, so we can't include every idea -- but we always try to include a few of the top-voted suggestions.

As always, thanks for your time and contributions! Please add your suggestions by Tuesday, Oct. 1.

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  • 205
    Can we also suggest what NOT to ask?
    – Emond
    Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 6:36
  • 8
    Why not ask some why's rather than what's and how's? Commented Sep 24, 2019 at 7:53
  • 5
    This will be removed from being featured on October 1.
    – George Stocker Mod
    Commented Sep 24, 2019 at 11:26
  • @GeorgeStocker You might want to include a big banner in the post as well, asking people not to post more answers/comments, or just lock it down. Commented Sep 24, 2019 at 23:18
  • 1
    @Andreas I've gotten flags about de-featuring it so I'm leaving the comment to let potential flaggers know of its status.
    – George Stocker Mod
    Commented Sep 25, 2019 at 0:30
  • I just the love the concept of badges, makes me feel like i'm the sheriff in town, i solve bugs and errors and in the name of JUSTICE i use standard coding structure. Let's survey on how many programmers do write standard code, rather than whichever works :p ? ( and their excuses will be because of the pressure from above ). No1 read that article in which it says "Rocket was destroyed before its launched becasue of "A lone omitted hyphen" ". Commented Sep 26, 2019 at 8:52
  • Why her reputations is not increasing? :P Commented Sep 27, 2019 at 6:33
  • 10
    If you're going to ask again about language favourites can you please differentiate between Python2 and Python3? Now that Python2 is basically EOL it would be nice to know how much legacy usage there is. Maybe do the same with PHP, would be nice to know which PHP version people really like.
    – Avamander
    Commented Sep 27, 2019 at 13:06
  • @PratikButani Reputation is not awarded for posts on a per-site meta.
    – S.S. Anne
    Commented Sep 27, 2019 at 19:51
  • 1
    As we are way past Tuesday, Oct. 1 shouldn't we close the discussion? Commented Oct 3, 2019 at 9:23
  • 1
    I'd like to see a question regarding to how satisfied the users are regarding to the different services provided by stackoverflow and the direction the company is taking regarding specific points.
    – kockburn
    Commented Oct 7, 2019 at 8:50
  • 4
    We've received your feedback on the 2020 Developer Survey. Work on crafting the survey has begun. Thanks for your input!
    – Jon Ericson Staff
    Commented Oct 9, 2019 at 16:38

143 Answers 143

3

What profession would you choose if you couldn't work in software/IT? (free-text response).

3

How often are you in the flow (or zone) during work?

  • Every day
  • A few times per week
  • A few times per month
  • Rarely
  • Never

Note: definition of flow from Wikipedia:

flow is characterized by complete absorption in what one does, and a resulting loss in one's sense of space and time

2
  • 7
    Perhaps "How often do you get interrupted during work?" Commented Sep 25, 2019 at 23:29
  • 1
    @noɥʇʎԀʎzɐɹƆ interesting question too, but quite different. not being interrupted doesn't mean being in the flow Commented Sep 26, 2019 at 6:44
3
Do you participate in competitive programming such has Hackearth?
1) Yes, more than once a month
2) Yes, about once a month
3) Yes, once every few months
4) Yes, but only occasionally
5) No, never.
3

Please spend some time and include the Delphi/ObjectPascal in the languages list at last. It's a shame you have overlooked it for several years prior

3

How often you check your mobile / personal devices during work ?

  1. Never
  2. 15 minutes once
  3. 30 minutes once
  4. one hour once
2

Given the choice, would you take a 20% pay cut to work a 4 day week?

2
  • Don't you always have this option?
    – rekire
    Commented Oct 4, 2019 at 12:44
  • @rekire that's up to your employer
    – Dan
    Commented Oct 4, 2019 at 12:49
2

Open Source initiative is widely growing and gathering more and more evangeists and enthusiasts across the world. It brings not only practical things, but also a cultue. As the poll auditory is highly representative, it will be extremely interesting to find something out about how far the community spreads. So ...

Do you contribute to Open Source community?

  • I'm an active contributor in a large-scale open source foudation (Eclipse, Apache, etc)
  • maintain a project which is expoited and has a community
  • participate as an active member in an open source project, not as a maintainer
  • occasionally fix/improve libraries I use for my projects
  • run a pet project
  • do not contribute

This is multy-choice selector.

2
When does you worry about accessibility and friendly interfaces for people with 
disabilities in your projects?

 - Never
 - Only when explicitly said to implement it
 - When I have sparing time to do so
 - On the majority of the projects
 - In every single project

Even with people with blindness and low vision being roughly 285 million people across the world (source), around 4% of the mankind, we have some accessibility focused profiles that doesn't get a lot of recognition, what makes me wonder if the developers around here tend to implement accessibility in their projects as a must-do.

2

What was your last "simplification" (project technology/language/ or framework) and what did you move to?

Examples,

  • Fortran to C++
  • EJBs to Spring
  • Java to python
  • Adobe Flex to ReactJS ...

I think it is a practical hint about the direction industry is heading towards to know what employers are paying money for.

All suggestions to modify this question are welcome.

1

I was wondering how often people change companies/roles and what the motivations might be. The survey already asks how long one has been working, so we can use that as a basis for the below.

First, we need to know if you're a freelancer/contractor.

Are you a Freelancer / Contractor or a Permanent Employee?

  • Freelancer / Contractor
  • Permanent Employee

Company changes (since we have how long one has worked, we can either ask how many companies one has worked at, or how often they change companies):

How many companies have you worked at in total? _____ companies.

How long do you stay at a company on average?

  • Less Than A Year
  • 1 Year
  • 2 Years
  • 5 Years
  • 6+ Years

Reasons for changing companies:

The reason you typically switch companies:

  • Better Total Remuneration
  • Better Travel Time / Commute
  • Better Role
  • Better Work Environment
  • Retrenchment / Job loss

Role Changes:

How many times has your role changed in total? ____ times.

How long do you keep a role on average?

  • Less Than A Year
  • 1 Year
  • 2 Years
  • 5 Years
  • 6+ Years

Reasons for changing roles:

  • Promotion
  • Change in Area of Expertise (i.e. what you do day-to-day)
  • More Leadership aspects
  • More Technical Work
1

Does your company use hot desking?

  • Yes
  • No
5
  • 6
    Curious - what's a hot desk?
    – Adam Lear StaffMod
    Commented Sep 26, 2019 at 5:13
  • 4
    @Adam I think it means that a there are no "set" workplaces, just a bunch of tables/chairs and connection points for electricity/network. Every day you come in and try to find a place to work, and hope there is one for you. I've only seen it used for external consultants, and it wasn't pleasant (for some reason, there is always one network cable less than what would be need, there is squeaky chair that does the rounds around the office because nobody wants it, stuff like that). (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_desking)
    – yivi
    Commented Sep 26, 2019 at 10:04
  • @yivi you have described my daily morning routine hahaha
    – Ryan James
    Commented Sep 26, 2019 at 23:41
  • @AdamLear it is the desk that is still warm from the last person using it : )
    – hat
    Commented Sep 30, 2019 at 7:14
  • 1
    How my. I wont even consider working in an office like this. Add this as possible answer and you have my vote.
    – aloisdg
    Commented Sep 30, 2019 at 12:55
1

How many computers/VMs do you work with, and what OS are they running. For example, 1 windows, 2 Linux VMs and 3 remote Linux servers

1
  • How engaged are you personally in mentoring efforts both within and outside your company?
  • How engaged are you personally in diversity and inclusion initiatives both within and outside your company?
1

How about the struggles faced by old developers?

  • find my development job easy to manage

  • I find my development job tough these days

  • I am facing discrimination from my work place

  • Not getting enough oppurtunities

Like the hard to speak to the world kind of questions, only for older developers.

1

Do you work on any other freelance projects outside work

0

Serious:

  1. Have advancements in development tools improved your productivity compared to a year ago?
  2. How often do you check social media during working hours?
  3. Are you concerned about your position being replaced by AI?

Silly:

Which is a better pet, cats or dogs?

8
  • 1
    Didn't we already had the cats vs dogs questions in the survey of 2018?
    – Mixxiphoid
    Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 6:28
  • 2
    I think question number 3 is waste of time. There are so many jobs to automate in the world and programming seems to be last of them. If anything add a timeline: "in 20/50/100 years?"
    – kukis
    Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 9:40
  • @kukis Really? I know someone involved in a project which has almost completed development of neural nets to create business applications from start to finish, code, dbs, and all. I think that the dev world might get a rude awakening.
    – hat
    Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 13:27
  • @Mixxiphoid I wouldn't be surprised if we already did the cat/dog one.
    – Barnyard
    Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 13:35
  • 4
    You are missing out on the best pet of them all, a Roomba
    – TineO
    Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 14:17
  • @TineO Yeah, those clean up after themselves.
    – S.S. Anne
    Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 18:34
  • I think #1 is too broad. A single bug fix in a tool you use could make the answer "yes", without providing useful information. Commented Sep 22, 2019 at 7:55
  • I don't think anybody can answer #2 reliably, unless they know the answer is "never" Commented Sep 22, 2019 at 7:55
0

I am very curious and interested to learning following question from the community:

Q1: What makes you consider changing job and what matters most. Select 1 to 4 (1 is highest priority and 4 is least priority) Assuming that you do not have trouble, issues or problem with your company or your boss?

  1. Salary, get higher salary than your current job.
  2. Learning, what you learn and if your employer allows you to learn and improve your skills.
  3. Prestigious, what you do and who you work for.
  4. People, who you meet and work with.

Q2: In your job you do stuff that getting routine over time, what do you do to learn and improve your skills?

  1. Routine does not bother you
  2. You spend every weekend to learn and improve your skills
  3. You spend once a month to learn and improve your skills
  4. Where needed to learn and improve your skills
2
  • I think this needs to be made more specific, because motivations change over time and per circumstance. Such as, what factors when in to choosing to leave your last job. One may leave because of a bad boss in one situation, but for more money in another. There's probably rarely if ever a "general" answer here. Commented Sep 22, 2019 at 7:50
  • @Flimzy I agree with you, I assume the person do not have troubles with boss and the company in general, but want to take the next step in his/her carrier. Commented Sep 22, 2019 at 9:24
0

You can add some questions to learn about what kind of working space people like.

What office environment you like? 1) open environment where anyone can sit anywhere 2) One table where the entire team sits on a single open table 3) quite close ( table with some partitions between) 4) cubicles with own personal space.

And also how many developers are really into competitive programming & they want to increase their knowledge, combining this with age & years of experience can help in analyzing users eager to improve their skills.

Do you participate in competitive programming such has Hackearth/hackerRank? 1) Yes, more than once a month 2) Yes, about once a month 3) Yes, once every few months 4) Yes, but only occasionally 5) No, never.

0

3 questions from me(they can be asked separately or updated if needed):

Question 1

Do you do something special for your health(physical or mental)?

  • never
  • daily
  • weekly
  • monthly
  • I tried once

Question 2

Do you have distraction free work and how many hours per day:

  • 0
  • 1 - 3
  • 3 - 5
  • 8

Question 3

Do you meditate or do other similar practices and how often :

  • never
  • daily
  • weekly
  • I tried once

I'm interested in general data related to mental health.

-1

What Continuous Integration tool do you use:

  • Buddy
  • CircleCI
  • Drone
  • GitLab CI
  • GoCD
  • Jenkins
  • TeamCity
  • Travis CI
  • other
  • none
1
  • While I don't necessarily think this question should make the poll, downvoters care to give your opinions on why you made this decision?
    – Felipe
    Commented Oct 1, 2019 at 16:12
-1

I would like to know, and I believe it will also be interesting for most of us to learn:

  • How open is your organization to sponsor education fees? (for any position that requires programming knowledge)
    • Only managers can apply
    • Only specific positions can apply
    • Only trainees can apply
    • Anyone can apply
    • My organization does not sponsor any educaction fee.
  • What is the % of the total fee your organization sponsors? (rounded to the nearest)
    • N/A
    • <20%
    • 20%
    • 40%
    • 50%
    • 60%
    • 80%
    • 100%
  • Up to what level of education does your organization sponsor?
    • N/A
    • Undergraduate
    • Postgraduate Certifications/Diploma
    • Master's degree
    • Doctoral's degree
    • Post Doctoral's degree
  • What's the modal interval for the age of employees benefiting from the sponsor?
    • N/A
    • 18-25
    • 25-32
    • 32-40
    • 40-50
    • 50-65
    • 65+
-1

It would be really hard to analyze it, because you create bias by making a selection beforehand, but it's near impossible to analyze if you don't.

But anyway.

What hype would you like to see disappear as soon as possible?

And positively:

What hype would you like to see become standard practice.

Not native speaker, so wording could probably better.

There's always been something in the survey about most dreaded technologies. Last year suddenly blockchain popped up. As our world in constantly in flux, I would really like to see what hypes we all notice and which ones we think are really bad and which ones are really good. Though it would be hard to analyze if you don't make a selection first...

-1

How much of your time at work do you spend on automating recurring tasks for yourself or your team? Where the recurring task itself is not part of the product you are shipping or the service you are providing.

  • {n} hours per week
0
-1

How does reading questions and answers on SO affect you?

  1. Positively, I learn new skills, expand my knowledge or feel valued for sharing
  2. Good, I may pick up new items or enjoy sharing what I know
  3. Indifferent
  4. Poor, I feel overwhelmed / inexperienced / have nothing to share
  5. Negatively, it makes me feel stupid / incompetent / unworthy to share
-1

Instead of asking for their first, or favorite language; maybe you could ask for the order in which they learned them, and in what order they wish they'd learned them (now knowing all the pros and cons of each one).

I've always wondered whether the path I'm taking is the best path from a beginner's point of view; and having professional developers give their opinion on this matter might generate interesting results. I imagine the optimal "path" for climbing the programming ladder, would be the one which the least amount of people regretted taking.

-1

Questions for developers who works in outsourcing companies. There are a lot of developers working inside of outsourcing companies that the IT is not his main activity and many of them had complains about it:

  1. Do you have the right equipaments to do your job?

    • Yes, my company provides
    • Yes, the outsourcing company provides
    • No, I bought them
    • No
  2. Your manager/company is able to follow your work in the client company?

    • Yes, we have periodical meetings
    • No
    • No, we just talk when some problem happens
  3. How was your experience working with developers from other companies on the same project?

    • I never worked on this situation
    • Good, nothing really changes
    • Bad, there are situations where one company wants to look better than another
    • Bad, differences in development culture created many conflicts
  4. How do you feel working outsourcing?

    • I like it
    • It's OK
    • Could be a lot better
    • I hate it

This is just some ideas. I will be glad if other people think on more questions on this subject.

-2

What about tech-level across your company. I've seen that companies where managers have deep technical experience, produce much higher quality products than companies that not.

Which of the following consistently represents the average technical skills of the management chain at the company you work for?
 A) Highly skilled 
 B) Just enough skilled
 C) Under skilled
 D) Not skilled at all

Do you consider the technical quality of your company's products is positively or negatively affected/influenced by the technical skillness of your management chain? 
 A) Yes
 B) No
-2

Being a coder/programmer have you thought about starting a startup company.?

  1. Yes, I thought about it.
  2. No, I never thought about it.
1
  • 2
    Add more granular options, maybe? As written, every one of "Yes, it crossed my mind briefly while I was having breakfast the other day", "Yes, I did a lot of research into it and built a working prototype but ultimately decided not to pursue it", and "Yes, I did found my own startup and had a successful exit for $10M!" would all fall under option 1. Commented Sep 27, 2019 at 13:10
-3

Where do you put the opening curly brackets ?

  • On a new line, aligned with the closing one
  • On the same line than the scope declaration (function, condition, loop...)
  • I code in python
2
  • 2
    There are also many reasonable styles that do things different for e.g. functions vs loops. I have doubts that this question can be asked in a way that is detailed enough while still remaining meaningful. Commented Sep 19, 2019 at 13:47
  • 1
    It also depends on the language. JavaScript's automatic semicolon insertion rules mean that certain forms for curly bracket inclusion just don't work well... Commented Sep 20, 2019 at 19:22
-3

What industry do you dream/want to work in? (Select your current one if it is your best preference.)

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