-56

Update on June 13, 2023: Thanks to everyone who took the survey! The 2023 Developer Survey results are available here. (Also see the announcement on the blog.)

The annual Developer Survey is now live! We want to hear from anyone who codes, is learning to code, is code-adjacent, or is in the developer community. The survey will remain open until May 19, 2023.

Don't delay, take the 2023 Developer Survey today.

Thank you in advance for your participation and for making your voice heard. A sincere thank you to everyone who provided feedback on our listed technologies for the 2023 survey. 

This year, you may notice some changes to the survey as we've worked to simplify the 2023 Developer Survey. For example, we have removed all demographic questions except age and country of residence. 

In addition, we're unfortunately no longer able to award the Census badge for those who complete the entire survey. You can learn more about this update here.

Survey results will be available publicly under the Open Database License. You'll be able to download and analyze the dataset later this year and we'll update this post once they're available.

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. Additionally, as a reminder, Qualtrics blocks certain countries from accessing their site and data: Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Syria, and the Crimea region of Ukraine (including Sevastopol). In addition, some users in China may have issues due to restrictions imposed by local internet service providers.

If you discover any bugs in the survey or have any questions or concerns, please feel free to add them below this post as answers.

24
  • 34
    Visual Studio (not VS Code) is missing from the development environments section
    – Lennart
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 12:20
  • 15
    The mention of the change(s) about the 'Census' Badge is a bit vague, could mention the change directly (between brackets maybe) without having to read a long separate Thread...: => "Beginning with the 2023 Developer Survey, we will no longer give the Census badge to those who complete the entire Developer Survey."
    – chivracq
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 12:47
  • 18
    Web frameworks, presumably "Spring" and "Boot" are supposed to be one option "Spring Boot"
    – khelwood
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 12:51
  • 8
    It would be good to be able to review the questions/answers after having submitted the survey. I had some feedback to give regarding some of the questions but now I have no way to go back to them
    – Paolo
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 12:54
  • 6
    "Which of the following best describes the code you write outside of work?" => How is option "Freelance/contract work" outside of work...? // + Could mention "SO + Tech Forums", many of us write Code on SO when answering Questions.
    – chivracq
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 13:08
  • 19
    My attitude towards the title is the same as ever: Why should I? Commented May 8, 2023 at 19:11
  • 12
    what's the internal review process for the survey like? the community review post uncovered a great many basic mistakes with casing the should have been fixed by basic googling, and the published survey contains several problems which people have pointed out here. I imagine this does not look good on the company. What are you going to do to avoid these kinds of mistakes happening in the future?
    – starball
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 21:43
  • 3
    I edited the wording of the Census badge "change" sentence; the original phrasing felt actively misleading to me. My impression is that the intent of it was certainly to "soften the blow" rather than "mislead", but it danced around the actual effect too much, and just ended up being confusing. Folks deserve to know that "change" means "went away" without having to click through or find out at the end of the survey.
    – zcoop98
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 23:13
  • 2
    Why was the "Race and ethnicity" section removed this year?
    – Paolo
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 9:31
  • 12
    @Paolo Presumably because that information is irrelevant, and none of their business to ask about?
    – Dan Mašek
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 9:48
  • 10
    @user every year they have these endless basic mistakes. Presumably the people designing and writing it are marketing people with no understanding of software development whatsoever.
    – OrangeDog
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 12:32
  • 16
    @Paolo Because this survey always had a heavy focus towards what upper management at SO considers the latest buzzword. Some years back it was "diversity". Now it is "AI". Buzzword-driven development...
    – Lundin
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 15:01
  • 20
    Maybe one year they'll actually show the survey to at least one developer before releasing it.
    – OrangeDog
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 18:01
  • 11
    Why doesn't the "How did you learn to code?" question not seem to include "Reading the documentation"?
    – Sam Dean
    Commented May 11, 2023 at 11:33
  • 3
    How many questions are there in the survey and how long does it approximately to finish it? Many other surveys kind of indicate that information at the beginning. Or am I simply not seeing it? Commented May 12, 2023 at 13:35

35 Answers 35

107

This year, you may notice some changes to the survey as we've worked to simplify the 2023 Developer Survey. For example, we have removed all demographic questions except age and country of residence.

I've stayed out of this discussion thus far, but... This is getting stupid. Please stop patronizing us.

You removed a bunch of questions and a badge because someone got spooked and realized you were probably skirting the edges of one or more country's privacy laws, and... possibly skirting them from the wrong side of the border, so to speak.

But you absolutely did not remove all but two demographic questions.

The primary purpose of this survey from its inception has been market research on behalf of potential customers. You can't do market research without... Identifying the markets you're targeting. If you removed all demographic questions, all you'd be able to say is "we got folks who use Stack Overflow". With age, you can tell potential customers which age ranges we fall into. With country, you can additionally tell them how we break down by region. That's a lot more specific! But... It's not enough. Clearly, since you also ask...

  • My profession
  • My employment status
  • Whether I work remotely
  • My education level
  • My field of employment

...and a whooooole bunch of other stuff. Heck, you even ask whether I've ever heard of Stack Overflow, have a SO account, which sites I visit, how often, etc. - the "demographics" that I suggested were almost a gimme.

The survey is chock full of demographics! You just removed the handful of demographics most likely to get you in trouble, while leaving the ones most useful when trying to sell stuff.

Look, I get it. Whatever's going on behind the scenes with the survey this year, I'm sure it's stressful and nobody's sure what they can or should say about it. I've been there. Heck, arguably I made the wrong calls when I was in that position, at least from a self-preservation standpoint, so... I can't really even be that mad about this charade.

But it is a charade, and a transparent one at that, so if anyone's wondering why this post is getting a grumpy response... Well, none of us like being treated as though you think we're rubes.

So if you can't tell the truth, at least stop lying.

5
  • 26
    Perhaps they labour under the misapprehension that "demographic" means "something that is readily identity-politicked over in the USA". Commented May 9, 2023 at 5:31
  • 14
    Naw, I don't buy that @Karl - Hanlon's razor not withstanding, that'd be akin to assuming a geologist doesn't know that "rock" is a broad term. More likely, the folks involved here are so accustomed to using more specific terms for various types of demographics that the term ends up as shorthand for a subset. Or, if we wanna be less generous... A less charged term for what under various laws and policies is properly termed Personally Identifiable Information. Given the persistent caginess surrounding all this, my bet is on the latter.
    – Shog9
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 15:59
  • 1
    This made me feel something approaching the same as at the end of 8mile. Please oh please won't you start posting again :)
    – Clive
    Commented May 10, 2023 at 10:42
  • Think of all the trouble we would have saved ourselves if we had simply not been curious about the gender gap. Commented May 17, 2023 at 18:50
  • 1
    That was fine, @JonEricson - in fact, I think it was generally beneficial... What was lost somewhere along the way was the purpose. Collecting demographics is always a tradeoff - you're asking someone to give up pieces of their privacy in exchange for... What? Originally, we could answer that question, and did answer that question. When it can't be answered anymore, that's a good sign that you're collecting things you shouldn't. That goes for all the demographics still in the survey too.
    – Shog9
    Commented May 17, 2023 at 22:33
57

Visual Studio was listed as a development environment for 2023 but isn't present in the actual survey.

Visual Studio not listed

IMHO, that's a major oversight which could lead to incorrect statistics.

2
  • 32
    Given that Visual Studio has been one of the most used IDEs last year, it's really a major flaw of the survey when it's not included.
    – BDL
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 13:54
  • 6
    Visual Studio added.
    – Dalmarus StaffMod
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 19:23
51

This year's survey felt more like it was market research for Stack Overflow AI products moreso than a "dev survey."

I feel like in the past, the survey has felt more like "Developer Survey" where overwhelmingly the inputs would be interesting to me as an engineer.

Not this year's - it felt like almost all the questions I was answering were purely relevant to SO the company (though I stopped midway through as a result of this).

33

Perhaps this is meta commentary, but I know I enjoyed participating in all previous questionnaires (and I'm a person who's known to voluntarily subscribe to such things).

However: I really couldn't get myself to finish the survey.

Is it me or is it repetitive and boring, more than previous years? It feels so soulless, as if I'm entering what's on my resume after uploading my resume.

8
  • any specific / concrete differences you noticed that might contribute to the feeling?
    – starball
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 18:39
  • 5
    I mainly couldn't get through the long lists of "which technologies/frameworks/tools do you use".
    – CodeCaster
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 19:27
  • @CodeCaster tbf, they did make note of that problem when curating the list, though that doesn't mean the mistake won't occur in a different way, ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    – Kevin B
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 19:36
  • 2
    @KevinB lol who started editing that post and putting it in tables, some with multiple columns and some with multiple terms per cell (based on first letter)? The fact that someone thought it needed that kind of edit tells enough, I think. Who's "they" though?
    – CodeCaster
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 19:39
  • They being SO, the company. They're well aware of the feedback around adding emotional spin to our responses being negatively received, ;) The table formatting? the edit history has all that info. Probably came from the community if i had to guess? someone right out of the gate complained scrolling was hard.
    – Kevin B
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 19:43
  • 19
    I miss the 'fake' question that gave the survey a personality... Star Wars or Star Trek... Tabs or Spaces... or "is Hungarian Notation still the worst idea ever? [yes] / [of course] / [yes, but the concept it was trying to do was good, but the documented implementation is what is wrong]"
    – scunliffe
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 21:33
  • 7
    @scunliffe I think that's it, it's just a soulless questionnaire as if I'm entering what's on my resume after uploading my resume.
    – CodeCaster
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 4:12
  • 2
    I miss the opportunities for swag Commented May 9, 2023 at 7:37
31

Spring Boot (in web frameworks and web technologies) should be one option, not two, no?

enter image description here

5
  • 8
    Or Spring and Spring Boot? (If it makes sense.) Commented May 8, 2023 at 15:08
  • 13
    This! Also “Play” and (right below it) “Framework”, which is probably supposed to be “Play Framework”.
    – Chortos-2
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 15:30
  • 21
    Ruby on Rails is also three entries i.sstatic.net/gWkW6.png
    – gunr2171
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 2:47
  • 22
    @gunr2171 My favourite framework is "on". Commented May 9, 2023 at 10:23
  • 3
    Spring Boot and Ruby on Rails fixed
    – Dalmarus StaffMod
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 19:23
29

What's in it for me?

This post is clearly a call to action, but I don't see any reason to act. Other answers have mentioned the removal of the Census badge; I don't care about badges, and if I did, it wouldn't be enough. We're talking here about the kind of thing that people sometimes offer significant amounts of real money for (and those offers sometimes get declined).

You want me to disclose information about myself and get nothing in return, so that you can market your products better by using the information. Then there's the privacy risk. I note here that you also expect me to trust Qualtrics, not just you; whatever your policies are, data breaches are a reality. You expect me to assume this risk without compensation.

I will give slight credit for removing some questions that were asked in previous years (ones that you call "demographic" questions - although as Shog9 rightly points out, a lot of what you're asking is still clearly demographic in nature) for which I cynically see only culture-warring, identity-political purposes (i.e., asserting that XYZ policy has made the site more "welcoming and inclusive" or else arguing that more XYZ needs to be done, without providing any empirical reason to expect a specific demographic breakdown of users beyond the most naive blank slatism imaginable). However, it appears that this is only incidental, and not motivated by any actual ideological shift. Meanwhile, you are apparently now also asking a bunch of questions about AI that seem intended to prime the audience for new AI "integrations" and get people used to the idea, despite the overwhelming rejection it has already received.

I see no reason to take the survey, just as I have not in the past; and for those of you about to do so, I would like to strongly urge you to reconsider.

2
  • 3
    on your AI point's "despite the overwhelming rejection it has already received.", well, the masses seem to have turned around (at least- those that kept their ears open) a little bit once SE actually gave some concrete examples. The title example is well received.
    – starball
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 7:58
  • 2
    Re "get nothing in return": You do get to influence the result. The survey is widely cited, including trends. By not participating you are amplifying the voices of others who do participate (however slightly, but collectively it matters). And the free form text at the very end is also an opportunity to influence (the impact is unknown, but it is usually huge if it is actually read as very few people (presumably) bother). It could be the very thing that sways a higher-up to take the right decision instead of the wrong one. Commented May 12, 2023 at 16:38
24

How is there not a "I search on a search engine like Google" option here?

I mean, even AI is an option, but the one thing people probably use most, good old fashioned google, isn't an option?

enter image description here

3
  • 2
    Other -> and then let's enter late 90's sites. AltaVista anyone?
    – rene
    Commented May 10, 2023 at 10:18
  • 1
    @rene ask ̶C̶h̶a̶t̶G̶P̶T̶ Jeeves
    – VLAZ
    Commented May 10, 2023 at 16:16
  • 9
    This is beyond absurd
    – Kevin B
    Commented May 10, 2023 at 17:40
21

I don't know how to interpret the "(more often)" part in this option:

Can one really have continuous delivery more often than continuous integration? I can only think of cases where continuous delivery happens less often than continuous integration. IMHO, we CI first and if that succeeds, we CD.

In my company, we don't have continuous delivery at all. So, should I check that checkbox, because we have CI, or should I not check that checkbox because we have less CD than CI?

1
  • 3
    I'd think it means "more often known as CI/CD, instead of CI only", which is basically "CI or CI/CD"
    – Andrew T.
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 14:30
21

Age question is missing a * even though it is a required question. Trying to move on without checking anything shows an error.

img

21

Under web frameworks: it's "ASP.NET Core", not "ASP.NET CORE". Also, what is "Framework"?

Framework

Was that supposed to be "Play Framework"?

And thanks for applying 66% of my answer to "other frameworks and libraries", but now there are ".NET (5+)" and ".NET Framework (1.0 - 4.8)", but .NET Core is missing.

.NET Core was released and supported from June 2016 until December 2022. Any reason for not including it?

2
  • 4
    Play Framework fixed.
    – Dalmarus StaffMod
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 19:22
  • 2
    But the .NET Core one?
    – CodeCaster
    Commented May 11, 2023 at 5:54
20

In the "Which programming, scripting, and markup languages have you done extensive development work..." question, there's an extraneous apostrophe in the Bash/Shell option:

enter image description here

It reads "Bash/Shell (all shell's)" (good grief, it hurts me just to type it). It should read "Bash/Shell (all shells)". Apostrophes are not used in plurals.

0
19

What is AI?

The survey immediately starts asking about "AI tools" without giving any definition for what it's talking about. Most computer assistant technologies from the last 30-40 years are "AI tools". From spellchecks and autocomplete to search and TTS and STT systems.

I assume from context you mean GPT and only GPT. But perhaps you were also thinking of GitHub Copilot?

If that's what you're asking about, then be specific. Almost everyone uses "AI tools" all the time, but most don't use either of those two.

4
  • 1
    I assume from context you mean GPT and only GPT. But perhaps you were also thinking of GitHub Copilot? Github Copilot is built on GPT.
    – vandench
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 12:28
  • 14
    @vandench yet another reason it should explain what it's talking about
    – OrangeDog
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 12:30
  • What are TTS and STT? Text-to-speech and speech-to-text? Commented May 12, 2023 at 16:24
  • 1
    @PeterMortensen correct.
    – OrangeDog
    Commented May 12, 2023 at 16:42
19

I'm asked about my annual compensation.

Below that, I'm asked whether that compensation is weekly, monthly, or yearly.

How is this to be understood? It feels confusing and redundant.

i.e., if I enter "24000" and "monthly", does it mean that I receive 24,000 each month, earning 24,000 × 12 = 288,000 in one year, or that I receive 24,000 / 12 = 2,000 each month, earning 24,000 in one year?

6
  • 2
    I don't remember seeing this. "Annual monthly compensation" is gibberish, obviously. Annual compensation is annual... Unless the survey wished to know if it is custom in your country to pay out salary once per week or once per month (no idea what that has to do with software development specifically though).
    – Lundin
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 13:06
  • 8
    We have fixed this.
    – J007B Staff
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 13:29
  • Why haven't I been asked about my annual compensation? Commented May 8, 2023 at 13:56
  • I would assume it's recursive, so if you enter that you receive infinite money monthly
    – Erik A
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 15:06
  • 1
    @Joy Should this be marked status-fixed like the fixes in previous years? Commented May 8, 2023 at 15:25
  • @Joy The fix seems to be removing the "weekly/monthly/yearly" switch. In my country the salarly is normally measured per month, so the switch would be convenient. :( Commented May 8, 2023 at 20:10
17

I've received an email at my work email titled "The 2023 Developer Survey is now open!". It says:

You're receiving this email because you are a valued customer.

It includes an "Unsubscribe" link but it takes me to Stack Overflow login page (with a redirect to https://stackoverflow.com/users/email/settings/current). I cannot login with my work email because there is no user associated with it. Instead, it asks me to create a new user. I apparently have a Teams subscription which is scheduled to be cancelled in 2 days but that doesn't have any settings to stop these emails. Please fix it.

1
  • 14
    I see you're in Germany. You can get them in big trouble for sending marketing emails with no way to unsub.
    – OrangeDog
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 17:56
16

Thank you so much for listening and adding some C and C++ ecosystem tools to the survey!

Note that I'm pretty sure it's redundant to say "GNU" in "GNU GCC", since GCC stands for GNU Compiler Collection. But I might be wrong.

Note: It's a little :/ to see that in the "developer tools for compiling, building and testing" section, system package managers like Homebrew (that's a system package manager, right?) are there (and thanks for adding others as suggested like APT, Chocolatey, PacMan), and language-ecosystem package-management-related technologies are also there, such as npm, pnpm, Yarn, NuGet, Maven, Gradle, but not other language-ecosystem-related ones like suggested, such as vcpkg, Conan, Spack, Hunter, and build2 (for C++). I.e., I still feel like there are imbalances in representation for various language ecosystems' tooling. Also, when you've got all those package-management technologies listed, I think the heading for that section should really also include "package-management".


I tried looking for the Git option in the technology sections (in an attempt to see if other SCM/VCS technologies got added as requested) and... is it just me or is it not there any more? If it isn't,... why?


Now, I did make a point about Bash/Sh and other shells (Zsh, Dash, Fish, etc.), but calling the option "Bash/Shell (all Shells)" is also problematic, since you put PowerShell as a separate option, and PowerShell is also a shell / shell scripting option.


"Worked with in PAST year" is a little bit ambiguous. Does it mean strictly just the past one year? Or any past year? I assume any, but maybe not everyone will. How about "Worked with in any PAST year"? Also, why specifically "next year"? Why not a more general "in the future" and "in the past"?


What's up with the "shopping question"s like "When buying a new tool or software, how do you discover and research available solutions?". A lot of sites in the Stack Exchange network don't allow shopping questions (see also Q&A is Hard, Let's Go Shopping!)... so is this just a Teams advertising related thing? I assume we'll find out in a future blog post :P

2
  • 3
    It’s the past year, as in the previous 12 months. Also next year, as in the next 12 months. They’re looking at what is hot now, not what was hot 20 years ago. Commented May 8, 2023 at 22:35
  • 1
    GNU can literally mean anything, a whole bunch of tools mostly of the Linux variety, including gcc. Or is it GNU's not GCC?
    – Lundin
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 14:51
16

Why is there a checkbox for the "none" option? Other questions (e.g. about databases) didn't have such an option. Suddenly I am required to check something where I already got used to the fact that there is nothing to check. That's inconsistent.

None option for AI powered search tools

It's also some kind of oxymoron: I worked with an AI-powered search tool and the tool I worked with is called "I haven't used any".

3
  • 1
    I interpreted this as "I don't want to use any AI-powered search tools next year" (a more extreme statement than "I don't want to use any of the below listed tools").
    – mkrieger1
    Commented May 8, 2023 at 13:34
  • 1
    "I haven't used any AI-powered search tools but I worked with them in the past year. Next year I want to work with AI-powered search tools that I haven't used." :)
    – Lundin
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 14:46
  • 2
    columns adjusted
    – Dalmarus StaffMod
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 19:26
14

For the Professional Developer Series, there's an asterisk in the text but it's never explained what the asterisk means. It can hardly be the asterisk explained at the very beginning of the survey, which means that the question is mandatory. If so, I expected that asterisk right after the question mark and not after an accompanying sentence.

Asterisk

13

This problem is still exactly the same as when it was reported last year, so I'm just going to quote Clonkex's answer from last year's survey:

What's with these intervals? From 1-2 times a week to never? What about 1-2 times a month? None of the options fit my case. I don't interact outside my team very often (maybe once or twice a month) but when I do it's usually because of knowledge silos.

A question asking "How frequently do you experience each of the following?" with options of "Never", "1-2 times a week", "3-5 times a week", "6-10 times a week", and "10+ times a week"

12

In the top message about "The new survey is open", you should write with BIG letters that "WE DO NOT AWARD THE BADGE FOR PASSING THE SURVEY ANYMORE". You removed the main motivation to do the survey and it can only be discovered after filling in the survey and not getting a reward :(

2
  • see revision 5 that zcoop made. Not exactly what you're looking for, but an improvement.
    – starball
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 8:00
  • 3
    Similar: ChatGPT asking for your telephone number at the very end of the sign up process (without any indication up until that point). Commented May 12, 2023 at 16:54
12

The list under "Which developer tools for compiling, building and testing have you done extensive development work in over the past year" shows a row for "GNU". What is that? The complete set of programs that replaces the classical UNIX programs (e.g. ls and pwd)? If so, why is there no row for the alternatives to the GNU tools?) Or is this somehow broken off of the "GCC" row? (GCC stands for "GNU Compiler Collection", so you shouldn't call it "GNU GCC").

3
10

For the questions that are 2 checkboxes of "do you do/use this now", and "do you want to do/use this later" it feels like there should be more explicit options available to get a better picture. Maybe a use this later (at work) and an (on personal/experimental projects) split?

Do I use AI code generation tools currently? No.

Do I plan to use AI code generation tools at work in the near future? also No.

Do I plan to (and do) tinker with AI code generation tools outside of work (where it isn't critical well regulated industries) where it can help me whip up some quick skeleton code to get me up and running faster with boilerplate stuff? You bet!, works great for this, then I can massage it to something usable and/or integrate it with other code... but it always needs to be reviewed, and requires a knowledgeable developer to be able to read through it and ensure it is doing what you wanted it to etc.

1
  • 2
    Yeah the "which have you done extensive development work with" (or however it's phrased) is something that some people won't read, and others like you and I will take too literally.
    – CodeCaster
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 10:13
10

The "Play Framework" option is mistakenly split into two options as shown below:

enter image description here

9

It's impossible to remove the answer in the question "How favorable is your stance on using AI tools as part of the development workflow?"

As often, my real answer is "it depends". I see some use cases for AI where I'm very favorable (like building helper tools) and other use cases where I'm absolutely uncomfortable (e.g. in automotive or medical).

Screenshot

8

Sad to see that, once again, not a single interesting question was asked in the survey. This is the fourth year in a row that it happens and the first ever year that I do not submit the survey. Nothing exciting, nothing interesting, nothing funny, just the usual boring questions... I have pretty much zero interest in completing such a survey or knowing its results. Please bring back interesting questions!

1
  • 1
    Maybe they should have asked ChatGPT to come up with a funny question about programming. Commented May 12, 2023 at 13:33
7

The education question needs more 'declared' flexibility in the answers. Some countries (e.g. Canada) differentiate between College and University (although this difference is starting to really blend now)... and as such someone can successfully finish College, and get a Diploma/certificate for completion, but not specifically a degree.

The answers for "Bachelor" should include " or College Diploma" type wording, or there should be a separate answer for this, as the only other answer that mentions College is the "some College" answer that indicates the person dropped out... which is very different.

5
  • 3
    Also, what kind of college? The American 18-21 college, the UK 16-18 college, or something else?
    – OrangeDog
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 9:20
  • 6
    Most countries around the world don't have "colleges" at all. The vast majority of all countries around the world have universities.
    – Lundin
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 14:56
  • 3
    Yeah, it just feels weird answering survey questions like this about education... I want to be honest, but I can't, so I have to choose a fake answer for associate or bachelor degree depending on my mood that day. For the data scientists in the room (e.g. presumably the folks that crunch this data afterwards)... just beware you're getting false answers because there isn't a complete set of valid options... and dirty data just feels bad... like its going to curve your spine, and/or keep you awake at night
    – scunliffe
    Commented May 9, 2023 at 21:06
  • 1
    Re "differentiate between College and University": They would call it "the Canadian system" (true story), but it is not just Canada. Commented May 12, 2023 at 17:00
  • They could do with a question like "Which option do you pick in a survey when you need none of the above?" First/Last/Random? I was once coached on how to answer surveys - always pick the extreme options and the neutral option otherwise because the 2/10 and 3/10 would take too long to honestly assess and are useless to the marketer anyway.
    – MT1
    Commented May 1 at 3:50
7

The banner on top appeared yesterday and I did the survey. Today I see the banner again.

Calling all who code. Take the 2023 Developer Survey.

It's a small thing, but I don't recall it was in the past. New bug?

Also I don't recall that after completing the survey there is an affiliated service ad (which provide survey, right?) with invitation to register. Of course I didn't register. I wonder if someone did.

6

Some of the questions provide no clear way to differentiate between "decline to answer" and "none of the above".

For example, I haven't done any database development work this year, nor plan to next year, so I left all the options blank on that question. But that's indistinguishable from someone who did (or is planning) database work but preferred not to say.

6

I felt this survey had repetitive questions like they do in psychological tests. Some questions started to ask about interactions outside of your team, but it wasn't clear that the questions after were technical or functional. So you end up asking yourself, "Should I answer yes or no to this question?". Did they mean I'm asking technical information to a colleague or that I was asking a business process information question to a colleague?

Does coding for one month in your spare time with some language counts as "extensive" or should I talk only about what I do daily or almost daily? I'm a full-stack developer, I work with Python, JavaScript, HTML, CSS, PHP, Go, SQL; Django, DRF (Django REST Framework), React, Vue.js; Redis, Typesense; PostgreSQL at my current work (yes, the codebase is split between legacy code and new code). I'm using PyCharm, but also Nano (when I commit XD) and Vim on the servers. Obviously, I cannot use everything daily, but the problem is that the questions do not help us to know what we should list.

For example, Django abstracts most of the SQL part. I only write SQL queries for some extractions or production debug from time to time. Should I list PostgreSQL and SQL that I know very well, but rarely directly code right now? I'm using the shell all day, but modify Bash scripts monthly or less than monthly. Should I list Bash?

5

This question shouldn't have an text input field.

enter image description here

4

Is the deadline really May 19, 2023? I thought for sure the 2022 survey was open for a number of weeks, but my memory may be faulty!

1
  • 1
    Yes, we are closing the survey on May 19 this year, and last year it was open for longer.
    – Erin Asks Staff
    Commented May 17, 2023 at 12:29

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .