242

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.

12
  • 205
    Can we also suggest what NOT to ask?
    – Emond
    Sep 18, 2019 at 6:36
  • 8
    Why not ask some why's rather than what's and how's? Sep 24, 2019 at 7:53
  • 5
    This will be removed from being featured on October 1. 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. 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. 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" ". Sep 26, 2019 at 8:52
  • Why her reputations is not increasing? :P 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
    Sep 27, 2019 at 13:06
  • @PratikButani Reputation is not awarded for posts on a per-site meta.
    – S.S. Anne
    Sep 27, 2019 at 19:51
  • 1
    As we are way past Tuesday, Oct. 1 shouldn't we close the discussion? 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. 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! Oct 9, 2019 at 16:38

143 Answers 143

-3

Two independent questions:

How do you typically land into Stackoverflow?
  a) Through its home page
  b) Through a search result on Google
  c) By its mobile app
  d) Other

How do you search through Stackoverflow?
 a) Using Stackoverflow's built-in search
 b) Using external search like Google, DuckDuckGo or other
2
  • 1
    I would have to answer a & b for both of those, I think this should probably be a multiple choice format.
    – hat
    Sep 25, 2019 at 16:38
  • 7
    I think they already have this information. Sep 25, 2019 at 20:22
-3

I would like questions about operating system use, specifically breakdown by Linux distribution

-3

What do you love most to do in free time office hours?

  1. Chatting with a significant other/friends?
  2. Talking with colleagues.
  3. To Q/A on Stackoverflow
  4. To search something new to learn
  5. Sleeping on desk
3
  • 2
    What is this "free time" during office hour you're talking about? :)
    – BDL
    Sep 27, 2019 at 6:24
  • :P So many reasons, you may didn't get webservices on time, you may have completed your task before the time, you may getting time in between doing programming. Event free 5 minute matters to do any above options. Specially I am doing Stackoverflow stuffs. Sep 27, 2019 at 6:32
  • 1
    I guess you mean "My code's compiling"? Sep 27, 2019 at 8:19
-3

How much time do you spend daily on Stack Overflow?

  1. < 1h
  2. 1h
  3. 2h-3h
  4. 3h-5h
  5. 5h <
  6. Half a day
  7. The entire day
  8. 25h
  9. What's Life?
-3

How many hours a week do you spend persuading (or arguing)?

I personally have found that in some shops, the acts of programming, designing, and educating can take a back seat to defending and promoting ideas. While not all shops get stuck in bickering, having semi-recently seen a shop where bickering is about 70% of the workday, I'm wondering if it is a common occurrence (and I've been mostly blessed with it's absence)

-3

This question is "aimed" mainly for full-time employees, but in my opinion, it can be relevant for every person who is about to start a "full day of coding".

1) Before you go to work, do you have any special and fixed morning routine, which lasts for ~30-45 minutes (the duration is "flexible" and can last a little longer or can be shorter) such as:

1. Eating a good breakfast at home/work.
2. Doing meditation.
3. Practicing mindfulness.
4. Yoga.
5. Workout (Run, GYM, etc...)
6. Other (fill in)

2) Do you find this morning routine beneficial for your productivity/focus during your working day?

1. Yes, without this morning routing I'm very much less productive/focused throughout the day.
2. Yes, without this morning routing I'm less productive/focused throughout the day.
3. No, with or without this morning routine my productivity/focused is more or less the same.
4. No, this morning routine is relevant also for non-working days.
-3

Do you travel for your job (monthly time frame)?

  1. No Travel but work onsite
  2. No Travel but work onsite with 1-3 days remote.
  3. No Travel but work remote.
  4. 25% Travel - 75% remote.
  5. 50% Travel - 50% remote.
  6. 75% Travel - 25% remote.

Are you considered

  1. Salaried - Full Time
  2. Contract W2 - Full Time
  3. Contract 1099 - Full Time
  4. Contract W2 - Part Time 1- many contracts
  5. Contract 1099 - Part Time 1-many contracts
  6. Contract 1099 and W2 - 1 to many contracts
  7. Salary and W2/1099 Part Time 1- many contracts
3
  • What is 1099 or W2? Guess it's some US code?
    – BDL
    Oct 2, 2019 at 7:16
  • It is what type of taxes do you pay an individual to work in the US. If you do contract programming in the US or you're salaried individual you can be with considered a W-2taxed individual or if one does direct contractor with a company it can be a 1099 which requires you to pay more taxes. It would be a USA only question I surmise
    – ΩmegaMan
    Oct 2, 2019 at 9:26
  • If I remember correctly from last year, there are no questions that are only asked to people of specific countries. I guess you will also see a lot of downvotes from non-US people who think that the question is not interesting (for them). Maybe you can try to reformulate it in a way that it can be answered worldwide?
    – BDL
    Oct 2, 2019 at 9:39
-3

With the advancements of code completion tools,

1- Would you consider a voice enabled IDE to be your main coding/debugging IDE?

  • Yes

  • No

  • Maybe/I don't know

  • It depends

  • Other

2- Answered in free form, What feature (or multiple features) would make you consider doing the switch from your IDE to voice enabled IDE?

Examples below

  • Code completion/modification (10> lines at a time)
  • Integration with resources (e.g. StackOverflow, GitHub...) to resolve bugs (e.g suggested solution1, suggested solution2).
  • Smarter troubleshooting (understands infrastructure where/how code is running)
  • Giving a quality architectural suggestions (hello Alexa "or google/whatever. no bias or affiliation with any", let's start refactoring this monolithic app into smaller apps and modules. We will use few different languages based on where/how they are used today...)
-4

I am interested to find out how programmers in general see themselves, and how this changes from hobbyists to students, and to professional developers.

Important note: it is the idea which I am proposing; the options below are merely to illustrate my meaning.

As a programmer, how do you see yourself? Choose all that apply:

  • Geek
  • Normal person
  • Programming is my career/hobby, not part of my personality
  • It boosts my status a little
  • Part of the worldwide programming community
  • Different to those around me
  • Nerd
  • Gifted
  • Just someone who codes
  • A loner
  • Privileged

These are just a few things off the top of my head; please feel free to suggest/add more (also to remove the less relevant/important ones). I think we could learn something interesting from the resulting data.

5
  • 1
    Aren't geek and nerd synonymous?
    – Lundin
    Sep 18, 2019 at 8:35
  • 3
    @Lundin I'd say no, for me at least, geek is more computer savvy while nerd is more comic book fan Sep 18, 2019 at 8:40
  • 4
    @Lundin Maybe yes, maybe not. Search "difference between a geek and a nerd" and you will have enough material for a masters thesis : )
    – hat
    Sep 18, 2019 at 9:05
  • 6
    @hat Sounds like a nerdy topic to study.
    – Lundin
    Sep 18, 2019 at 10:15
  • @Lundin Oh well, pandora's box has been opened youtube.com/watch?v=2Tvy_Pbe5NA
    – k0pernikus
    Sep 18, 2019 at 13:21
-4

I'd like to see some questions around your hiring practices and developer involvement. Do developers write code in your interview? On a white board? On a computer? Before hand? Are you satisfied with how the process works? Does the ultimate decision rest with the would be hires peers or superiors?

-4

I'm interested in what keyboard layouts people use, and how they type:

Which keyboard layout do you use?

- QWERTY
- DVORAK
- AZERTY
- COLEMAK
- Other/non-latin keyoard
How fast do you type?
[   ] wpm
When typing on a phone:

- I type with one hand, one thumb
- I type with two hands, both thumbs
- I hunt and peck
- I swipe
- Other

7
  • 8
    Isn't the choice of keyboards highly influenced by the country you live in? I am not sure that a lot of people actually choose a keyboard, except if they come from another country using another type of keyboard than the one used in their original country... But I might be wrong about that. :) Sep 19, 2019 at 10:22
  • 1
    Some people choose keyboards like DVORAK, or COLEMAK.
    – PiRocks
    Sep 19, 2019 at 10:27
  • Oh, OK. :) I did not know about that. But then I think that there's a strong difference between choosing DVORAK instead QWERTY, for instance, and using AZERTY instead of QWERTY because is the norm in your country (as in France, for example). In one case, it's a layout preference from the user, while in the other, it's just two differents standards Sep 19, 2019 at 10:35
  • 1
    "When typing on a phone" many people swipe-type too
    – Cid
    Sep 19, 2019 at 13:44
  • 2
    I doubt many people know how many words per minute they can type. Sep 19, 2019 at 20:19
  • 1
    Perhaps rephrase as: "Did you explicitly choose a specific keyboard layout for programming or do you prefer your countries/locales default keyboard layout?" default, dvorak, neo, neo2, colemak, ... there are lots of them, so maybe letting people name their layout (if not default) could be the best choice. Statistics is no fun with extremely low probabilities.
    – mbx
    Sep 20, 2019 at 6:37
  • I would definitely like to see the question of how fast you typed, potentially linked to a speed test if people don't know off hand. As someone that uses a non default keyboard (Dvorak) I'd love to know how alone I am, but at minimum the question needs two others, one for another more esoteric optimized layout, and one for a different regional layout.
    – macdja38
    Oct 7, 2019 at 17:31
-4

I would love to get some analytics on:

Are you right-handed or left-handed?

2
  • 3
    Cross-dominant? Ambi-dextrous? And in any case, relevance? What is this useful for?
    – yivi
    Sep 24, 2019 at 14:11
  • @yivi I didn't think about it until you asked but maybe you can get some info on workplace ergonomics for left-handed people! I posted suggestion since Anita did mention in her question We are always on the lookout for fun/silly questions.
    – prinkpan
    Sep 24, 2019 at 14:21
-4

Have you been interviewed for the position with the latest technologies but after joining the company you were given a project which uses outdated technologies?

-4

Do you teach the art of coding to your children?

  • Yes, with code.org
  • Yes, with scratch
  • Yes, with others
  • No
  • Certainly not, I don't want to pervert them
  • I don't have any children of a suitable age
2
  • 3
    1) What's the difference between "No" and "Certainly not?", 2) Probably needs a few more options besides code.org (or don't mention it either), otherwise the question feels like an ad, 3) Obvious missing option "I don't have any children of a suitable age" Sep 26, 2019 at 13:09
  • 2
    @InquisitiveLurker They carry a different sentiment. "no" has a "weaker" meaning than "certainly not". The first could imply that they haven't thought about or just haven't seen the point, while the latter asserts a strong opinion regarding the reason not to.
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Sep 27, 2019 at 7:56
-5

How ergonomic are you? / How ergonomic do you want your workstation to be?

  • Mouse
  • Keyboard
  • Posture?
  • Monitor
  • Chair
  • ...
  • Not at all
  • Whatever is provided

Not sure about the wording of the question, but you get the meaning.

-5

At your professional work, what percentage of your development is recognized as 'uniquely yours' means no other developer could easily lay hands on? 1. 0% 2. < 10% 3. < 25% 4. < 50% 5. >50%

At your professional work, what percentage of your development is recognized as 'previously impossible' means the company had failed to develop before with other developers, even after resorting to external consultants and specialists? 1. 0% 2. < 10% 3. < 25% 4. < 50% 5. >50%

-6

Last time round when I answered the question about whether we used unit tests where I work, I had to answer that we did not. However, that is the main reason why I had moved to a different employer by the time the results came out. (So nice to be back among the sane.) I think it would be worth asking how developers feel about the answers to their questions -- after a question about something like whether tests are used you could ask another question like "How happy are you with the level of testing in use where you work?", with options like "I really want this to change", "I would quite like this to change", "I'm not bothered", "I think this is OK", "I feel strongly that we've got it right".

-6

How often do you get your own desk; select as many as apply:

  • It depends when I get in
  • I'm on a rotating list
  • I have to find my own desk at least once a week
  • I have a permanent desk
  • I work from home
  • I don't need a desk at my job

(did I miss any?)

4
  • 2
    That's an interesting question... I've never heard of a workspace where you DON'T get your own desk, unless you mostly work remote. Is that common in your country? (i work in US/Canada)
    – yhyrcanus
    Sep 18, 2019 at 14:33
  • @yhyrcanus lots of different teams, not enough room for everyone, but never at capacity.... Sep 18, 2019 at 14:49
  • @yhyrcanus The first three options all fit an open-floor-plan office, depending on how full it is and how they choose to mitigate it. In fact, I'd add another: one of our teammembers has given up and claims a stool/countertop in the kitchen instead of trying to get a desk. I'm curious as to why this is so downvoted.
    – Izkata
    Sep 18, 2019 at 15:28
  • @Izkata I have all the first three and I'm not in a 'true' open plan office. We have small dividers between groups. Check the edit history for the reason it's downvoted... Sep 18, 2019 at 15:40
-6

1) As a consultant, how often are you asked/incentivized/constrained to write dirty codes, e.g. spaghetti, undocumented, untested? (an answer ranging from never to always).

Somewhat equivalent question:

How much/often is the quality of the code valued by your clients?

and

2) As a consultant, how appropriately selected do you think the local "IT" guy is to evaluate your service ? (an answer ranging from "not at all" to "perfectly").

4
  • Why would an IT guy evaluate my work? Sep 19, 2019 at 20:21
  • @CrisLuengo After 5 years as consultant developping economic oriented tools, beyond "why", I can tell that 80% of the time, I had to interact with, and, ultimately be judged by, intra-companies' IT guies who knew nothing about coding beyond producing imperative spaghetti codes. And they were consulted by their hierarchy to know how good was my work, yet which was unit-test driven, documented and OO. The point is that they were not capable of apprehending be it 20% of the quality of the work that I was producing. This may be something specific to the economic modelling community though.
    – keepAlive
    Sep 19, 2019 at 21:50
  • LOL. Is that because it's "computers"? I guess I've never been hired by someone who doesn't understand at least a bit about what I do. Sep 20, 2019 at 1:32
  • @Cris whilst not going quite that far, they were simply more into clicking than into coding... coding 100% S.T.U.P.I.D codes, which according to them was enough to be qualified as a "programmer" and feel legitimate to judge others' codes, and enable (or not) the payment of contracts. As you say, lol.
    – keepAlive
    Sep 20, 2019 at 6:39
-6

After all these decades of programmers being taught how to write proper programs, I'd like to know:

  • What percentage of your code contains useful comments?

In most production code that I've seen, less than 2% of the source lines are useful comments. I've worked on projects with 5,000-line source files having zero comments.

Discussion should not include pithy assertions about so-called 'self-documenting code'.

2
  • 5
    I think it's very difficult to give an objective judgement to our own comments... everybody thinks their comments are useful :-) Sep 25, 2019 at 20:57
  • @PaoloFulgoni - But I've seen far too much code with no comments. Oct 21, 2019 at 22:06
-7

How aligned to the current political situation in your country, are you? If you had the opportunity and option to, with minimal negative consequences, would you move to another country?

  • Yes
  • No

Would be interesting to see the statistics on this, preferably with a map that the countries with a higher percentage "yes" on this question, stand out.

1
  • 1
    I could see one on political slant maybe :)
    – rogerdpack
    Sep 23, 2019 at 3:54
-7

I'd like to know if people get paid enough money for a family (rent a house with enough bedrooms, pay schools, feed several mouths, etc) when offered country relocation. I've seen that it's usually the same salary a single person would get (which is fair in all terms, but it's a good reason not to relocate if your family would get an inferior or insufficient quality of life). So:

After relocating to a different country for accepting a job offer, and having lived there for a couple of years, was the initial salary offer worth enough to feed a family of 3-4 persons?

3
  • Very specific on one hand. It only applies to a very small subset of users. Extremely opinionated on the other (what's "enough to feed a family" equivalent to?).
    – yivi
    Sep 24, 2019 at 14:01
  • There's a lack of developers in the industry. Each time more and more companies choose to perform recruiting to bring talent from other countries, just to fulfill their needs. The text could be rephrased, but the intention is this: "have you naively accepted a job offer on another country, to then find out you left everything just to decrease your quality of life?" Sep 24, 2019 at 14:05
  • 1
    This question has so many assumptions that it would need many different "no" answers to be useful: No, I don't have a family to feed. No, I have never relocated to a different country. No, I have never accepted a job offer. No, I never lived there for a couple of years. No, they did pay me enough. Etc. Sep 26, 2019 at 17:28
-7

Question

You've been assigned to maintain the source-code of this software, what are you gonna do?

Options

  • The existing software is still alpha-tested level, I'm better off building a new one from scratch
  • The existing software is still alpha-tested level, I'm gonna just keep on improving it
  • The existing software is still beta-tested level, I'm still better off building a new one from scratch
  • The existing software is still beta-tested level, I'm gonna just keep on improving it
  • The existing software is super production-grade level, I'm still better off building a new one from scratch
  • The existing software is super production-grade level, I'm gonna just keep on improving it as much as I can
  • The existing software is super production-grade level, I'm gonna just keep it as it is with very minimal changes

The options are checkboxes where they can tick what works for them (developers)

1
  • On this question, voting indicates if you want to see this question in the survey or not.
    – BDL
    Sep 27, 2019 at 6:44
-7

In 2019 Survey, .NET and .NET Core were two different option for framework section. Please merge these two into one as in upcoming recent future Microsoft is going to merge .NET Core and .NET Framework into one .NET.

-8

What is your MBTI type?

My guess would be a heavy skew towards Introverts, and Thinkers, with a moderate preference to Intuitives and a mix of Judgers / Perceivers.

-9

How do you overcome a depression / burn out?

Nothing
Music (specify genre)
Vacations
Family support
etc ...
-9

I would be interested to see the correlation between years of experience or job position (junior, senior, manager etc) and knowing about terms like:

  • Technical Debt
  • Cargo Cult Engineering
  • Bikeshedding
  • Conway's law

The question could be quite simple, for example "Do you know what Technical Debt is?" or another idea would be to add a humorous comic strip and ask the user if they get it. For example:

Q: Do you understand what the following comic tries to say?

enter image description here

  • Yes, I know what "Technical Debt" is
  • No, I will have to search for that
5
  • 2
    If you ask the question similar to the example, the result is heavily biased. The text (of course I know) and the setting in general make it seem as if every programmer have to know about those terms. But this will lead to a lot of people saying yes just because they think they should not, not because they do know.
    – BDL
    Sep 20, 2019 at 8:46
  • Thanks for your comment @BDL. I removed the "of course" part. If you have any suggestions how to make the question better, please share.
    – tgogos
    Sep 20, 2019 at 9:17
  • 4
    Not using comic strip to avoid the "only male" stereotype ? (on top of the reputation the author has)
    – Tensibai
    Sep 20, 2019 at 9:42
  • Yes, it can be replaced with something else (this for example). I'm not focusing on this though or how the actual question is formed. The topics mentioned are the important IMHO.
    – tgogos
    Sep 20, 2019 at 10:26
  • 1
    Nice question but little refinement needed based on comments by far. Sep 22, 2019 at 14:52
-9

To show the world that the stereotype of programmers/hackers is wrong:

  • How many of you are wearing hoodies 24/7?
  • Are you coding in VERY dark environments?
  • Do you use multiple terminals?
  • And most important: is your terminal theme green text on black?

Maybe also interesting would be the following:

  • Do you have a nerdy partner (gf/bf)
  • Do you just eat pizza?
  • When was the last time you were going out of the house:
    • today
    • yesterday
    • this week
    • this month
    • this year
    • what's this outside you are talking about?
2
  • 4
    Those are stereotypes of programmers?
    – Script47
    Sep 26, 2019 at 15:25
  • At least I had to deal with them...
    – Cedric
    Sep 26, 2019 at 15:28
-9

What Tech stack do you use at work?

Frontend:

Backend:

Database(s):

Hosting:

1
-9

In your opinion, which language will become THE language of the near future? (choice of N in M languages)

By THE language I understand a language that is widely used, such as JavaScript, Java and Python today, C not that long ago and COBOL... pretty long ago.

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