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Update on May 3rd, 2023: Thank you for all the comments and suggestions! We have collected your responses and have completed reviewing your suggestions for the survey.

It is that time of year again when we ask you all to be our second pair of eyes on the annual Developer Survey! Below you will find the technology choices we would like to include in the 2023 survey. If you notice any additional options that should be included, please post an answer below with the name, category, and a brief description or references to why it should be included in this year's survey.

We have also heard your feedback on the Loved, Dreaded, Wanted analysis. We’re going to experiment with different analyses for this, aiming to remove the emotional attribution while still examining the responses for "Worked With and Want to Work With”.

We value your input, I promise.  While we are reviewing your answers here, keep in mind we may not reply to them unless we need clarification.  Any suggestions will be considered, but we will not necessarily be honoring all suggestions. That being said, we are very excited to kick off the survey next month and look forward to hearing from you.

We will be collecting feedback until Friday, April 28, 2023.

Programming, scripting, and markup languages
Ada, Apex, APL, Assembly
Bash/Shell
C, C#, C++, Clojure, COBOL, Crystal, CSS
Dart, Delphi
Elixir, Erlang
F#, Fortran
GDScript, Go, Groovy
Haskell, HTML
Java, JavaScript, Julia
Kotlin
Lisp, Lua
MATLAB
Nim
Objective-C, OCaml
Perl, PHP, PowerShell, Prolog, Python
R, Raku, Ruby, Rust
SAS, Scala, Solidity, SQL, Swift
TypeScript
VB.NET, VBA
Zig
Database environments
BigQuery
Cassandra, ClickHouse, Cloud Firestore, CockroachDB, Cosmos DB, DBCouchbase, CouchDB
Datomic, DuckDB, DynamoDB
Elasticsearch
Firebase Realtime Database, Firebird
H2
IBM DB2, InfluxDB
MariaDB, Microsoft SQL Server, MongoDB, MySQL
Neo4j
Oracle
PostgreSQL
Redis
Snowflake, SQLite, Supabase
Cloud platforms
AWS
Cloudflare, Colocation
DigitalOcean
Firebase, Fly.io
Google Cloud
Heroku, Hetzner
IBM Cloud or Watson
Linode
Managed Hosting, Microsoft Azure
Netlify
OpenShift, OpenStack, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, OVH
Scaleway
Vercel, VMware, Vultr
Web frameworks and technologies
Angular, AngularJS, ASP.NET, ASP.NET Core
Blazor
CodeIgniter
Deno, Django, Drupal
Elm, Express.js
FastAPI, Fastify, Flask
Gatsby
jQuery
Laravel, Lit
NestJS, Next.js, Node.js, Nuxt.js
Phoenix, Play Framework
React, Remix, Ruby on Rails
Solid.js, Spring Boot, Svelte, Symfony
Vue.js
WordPress
Other frameworks and libraries
.NET, .NET Maui
Apache Kafka, Apache Spark
Capacitor, Cordova
Electron
Flutter
GTK
Hadoop, Hugging Face Transformers
Ionic
Jax
Keras, Ktor
Maui, Micronaut
NumPy
OpenCV
Pandas
Qt, Quarkus
RabbitMQ, React Native
Scikit-learn, Spring Framework, SwiftUI
Tauri, TensorFlow, Tidyverse, Torch/PyTorch
Uno Platform
Xamarin
Developer tools Developer environments
Ansible Android Studio, Atom
Cargo, Chef BBEdit
PHP Composer CLion
Docker DataGrip
Flow Eclipse, Emacs
Godot, Godot Engine Fleet
Homebrew Geany, GoLand
Kubernetes Helix
Maven IntelliJ IDEA, IPython/Jupyter
Nix, Npm, NuGet Kakoune, Kate
Pip, Pnpm, Podman, Pulumi, Puppet Micro
Terraform Nano, Neovim, NetBeans, Notepad++, Nova
Unity 3D, Unreal Engine PhpStorm, PyCharm
Yarn Qt Creator
RAD Studio (Delphi, C++ Builder), Rider, RStudio, RubyMine
Spyder, Sublime Text
TextMate
Vim, Visual Studio, Visual Studio Code, VSCodium
WebStorm
Xcode
Operating systems
AIX, Android
BSD
Chrome OS, Cygwin
Haiku
iOS, iPadOS
Linux-based
macOS
Solaris
TempleOS
Ubuntu
Windows, Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)
Collaboration tools
Adobe Workfront, Airtable, Asana, Azure DevOps
Basecamp
Cerri, Clickup, Confluence
DingTalk (Teambition), Document360, Doxygen
GitHub
Jira
Leankor, Linear
Markdown File, Microsoft Lists, Microsoft Planner, Miro, Monday.com
Notion, Nuclino
Planview Projectplace Or Clarizen
Redocly, Redmine
Shortcut, Smartsheet, Stack Overflow for Teams, Swit
Tettra, Trello
Wikis, Wimi, Workzone, Wrike
YouTrack
Communication tools
Cisco Webex Teams, Coolfire Core
Discord
Google Chat, Google Hangouts Meet
IRC
Jitsi
Matrix, Mattermost, Microsoft Teams
RingCentral, Rocket.Chat
Signal, Skype, Slack, Symphony
Telegram Messenger
Unify Circuit
WhatsApp, Wickr, Wire
Zoom, Zulip
AI search options AI development tools
Andi Adrenaline, AWS CodeWhisperer
Bing AI GitHub Copilot
ChatGPT Mintlify
Google Bard Replit Ghostwriter, Rubber Duck.AI
Metaphor Synk Code
Neeva AI Tabnine
Perplexity AI, Phind Whispr AI
Quora Poe
WolframAlpha
You.com
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  • Current count (revision 7): 320 items Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 10:09
  • This could be done by manually correcting them one by one, but this calls for automation. Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 10:15
  • Related (ambiguity of "Maui" / "MAUI" - "Multi-Adaptable User Interface"? "Multi-platform App UI"?): Move [maui] posts to [.net-maui], and force disambiguation on [maui] Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 15:43
  • 1
    "Symphony" is ambiguous. Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 18:20
  • 5
    Nice technical list. Still unsure why Prosus needs such extensive personal info on Developers. Where can I complain about the 2023 Developer Survey's list of personal questions (age, state/country of residence, etc.)? Commented Apr 22, 2023 at 9:24
  • 1
    Is Dagger significant enough to be included as a competitor to Docker / Podman?
    – tripleee
    Commented Apr 22, 2023 at 12:33
  • 1
    @jubilatious1, age and country of residence have been questions on the survey since the very beginning (2011- way before Prosus acquired Stack Overflow). see for yourself
    – starball
    Commented Apr 23, 2023 at 21:37
  • ....and....they're not optional. Commented Apr 24, 2023 at 2:37
  • What were the complaints about "Loved, Dreaded, Wanted"? It seems more informative to me than "Worked With/Want to Work With"
    – lofidevops
    Commented Apr 24, 2023 at 16:11
  • 5
    Actually, just noticed ya'll are finally dropping the "Loved, Dreaded, Wanted" choice - gotta give credit where credit's due - thanks for listening to the feedback! Those were really too emotionally charged (as well as useless from the standpoint of trying to ascertain the trends, mostly for the same reason). Commented Apr 24, 2023 at 16:15
  • 1) out of curiosity, should this be closed now, since the period for collecting feedback (which is the purpose of this post) has ended? 2) also, will there be any announcement about how exactly our feedback was taken into account?
    – starball
    Commented May 7, 2023 at 10:49
  • 1
    @user 1) nah, I'd not go for closing it - it's on-topic and can benefit from potential answers even if SE doesn't look at it anymore ("no longer reproducible" might be appropriate, but dunno if it's worth it); 2) judging from the previous years - not a chance there'll be one (although there will likely be an announcement of the survey going live which is when we usually learn of whether the suggestions were accepted. Good question, though, [1/2] Commented May 7, 2023 at 12:25
  • 1
    [2/2] I actually requested status tags on answers last year, and Jnat promised to do it this year, but as you can see, SE seems to have forgotten about it as usual. Commented May 7, 2023 at 12:26
  • 1
    Looks like it went live as the wrongly-cased "Intellij", not as "IntelliJ IDEA" shown in this list. Also "Maven (build tool)" instead of just "Maven".
    – M. Justin
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 19:57

33 Answers 33

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Programming, scripting, and markup languages: Inform, Markdown, MicroPython, OpenSCAD

Cloud Platforms: Arduino Cloud

Other frameworks and libraries: MFC

Development Environments: Arduino, idle, PlatformIO

Operating Systems: OpenVMS. And where are the real-time OSes?

Developer Tools: Seems very broad. Should this include tools like ASAN, MSAN, TSAN, UBSAN, Valgrind, (Windows) Application Verifier, other static and dynamic analysis tools, etc.? What about profilers? Vtune, ETW, perf, etc.

Communication Tools: I'd bet #1 is email. Too bad that's not on the list.

AI Development Tools: I know a few developers who use ChatGPT to produce code to be used as a starting point.

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  • 1
    MFC is ancient. Does it see significant use (not a rhetorical question; Turbo C++ does)? Commented Apr 25, 2023 at 11:44
  • 2
    @Peter Mortensen: Ancient? No. Antique? Possibly. Poking around on GitHub, I see MFC is the framework for thousands of public projects, including Bruce Dawson's actively maintained UIforETW (github.com/google/UIforETW). Given inclusion of tech like Fortran, COBOL, and TempleOS, I don't see MFC as much of a stretch. Commented Apr 25, 2023 at 13:52
  • The Developer Tools section also seems to be missing bug tracking tools (Bugzilla, et al) and code review tools (Phabricator, Gerrit, etc.). Commented Apr 25, 2023 at 13:57
-3

I would say we are on the frontier of doing more web front-end development without heavy duty web frameworks such as the usual Angular, React or Vue. As such I would expect technologies such as HTMX and VanillaJS to start to make an appearance.

-12

Can Hoylu Workspaces be added to the collaboration tools?

It's a virtual canvas/whiteboard with templates for kanban, pull planning, retros, flow charts, notes, to name a few, and integrations with Jira, MS Teams, Webex, and a few more. Similar niche to Miro.

Disclosure: Hoylu is the company I work for, Workspaces is a product I've never personally worked on, but use regularly.

4
  • 3
    Why though? The company isn't even notable enough to have its own wikipedia page. Doesn't sound like it'd make for an interesting data point Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 21:12
  • 2
    @ZoestandswithUkraine Why not? Is having a wiki page a necessity? They are easy to create from what I understand. I've not ever heard of many of the tools already listed and don't care enough to research if they have a wiki page to be considered "notable" enough. They were notable enough someone knew of and included them. Anyway, this is just a request. :)
    – Drew Reese
    Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 21:15
  • 6
    Quite a few tools don't have wikipedia pages (because companies do, but tools generally don't), but they generally have other stats to back up notability. A wikipedia page is indeed not required, but when you're pushing a project you are affiliated with, that appears to have next to no users, and no public notability beyond having a single page ranked for "hoylu" (followed by the first page being dominated by an artist by the same name) in the three search engines I checked, it seems like spam at worst and an uninteresting data point at best Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 21:21
  • 10
    There's also plenty of stuff that's going to get excluded for not being notable. I have several things I've made for instance, but that won't be listed (and that I wouldn't try to list anyway, because it'd be a boring data point). Notability, while not explicitly defined as a measurable quantity in "must have a wikipedia page" or "at least x amount of users", does matter for inclusion in the survey Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 21:24
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