While on the academia SE, I clicked on the reputation button and saw this:
I actually don't recognise the icon next to all those StackOverflow reputation changes, but it's obviously not correct. On SO it looks like this:
@VLAZ Still up. You might roll your comment into an answer. We may have a "I made a typo in the tag I just created what should I do to fix it?" target available though I haven't looked.
Does a user get reputation points for editing a question ?
I ask because I have recently had a question edited in such an inconsequential manner I was left wondering why anyone would bother (fwiw the edit in question did not fit within the list of best practice edit motivations).
My best guess wa...
While checking the existing tags, I stumbled upon following typo tag:
[golnag], which is a typo of [golang]
The mentioned typo tag doesn't have any associated questions, so there's no danger deleting it.
Problem
Every day on SO, I come across questions sharing a stack snippet that has local images in it, which makes the images inaccessible and the problem irreproducible. While this is not always a problem, it often is, especially when the question is about the images...
If users would read the gu...
I recently posted this question on SO,
and while at the time, I thought the mkdir command didn't work,
later, I realized that it not the issue, and the problem was caused by something else in my script.
My inquiry is: What should I do with the question that is asking of a problem which does not e...
Maybe we can try creating one zombie tag. Create a tag on SO which maches a tag on another stack. Then see if it will be removed later.
Trouble is that if it does get removed, it doesn't really confirm anything.
There could be a weird condition to zombify a tag - e.g., has to be used on SO, then somebody from MSE should go check their tag badge. Which would then inject the zombie virus in the tag. Or whatever shenanigans are needed to get it stuck in the cache.
I happened to take a look at Site Analytics for Mechanics.SE today. The traffic count seems funky. Has there been something done to change how site traffic is being counted or is this an issue?
> The big draws with the Developer Survey have always been the technology rankings, where technologists profess their most used, loved, dreaded, and wanted languages, frameworks, and more.
> 62% of regular Stack Overflow users visit the same question multiple times in a three-month period.
This statistic seems...exceptionally not useful. If you've asked a question, you'd go back to see it. Is this counted? And if you're a regular that searches for dupes, then guess what - you'd be visiting the dupes a lot.
I just came across a question that was closed by a moderator (♦)
However, said moderator just has a default (user<number>) username.
Seeing as the account has over 200k rep, and is over a decade old, it's obviously someone that has earned his stripes on SO.
However, as moderators are elected by t...
> Rust is on its seventh year as the most loved language with 87% of developers saying they want to continue using it. Rust also ties with Python as the most wanted technology with TypeScript running a close second.
The header banner text and link look like this (simplified):
Results from the 2022 Developer Survey are <a target="_blank" href="https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2022">[here]</a>.
Any front-end dev should know to never link "here". Is accessibility a priority at SO these days? What's wit...
Link: https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2022/#developer-profile-key-territories
This is the case regardless of the light mode/dark mode selection.
Light mode:
Dark mode:
Can this be fixed so that, e.g. black (rather than white) text appears on the light grey background?
The "All countries" tab in the "Geography" section of the 2022 Developer Survey has extremely low contrast. This affects readability. On low brightness, it is hard to see that there is any text in the white/grey rows. On higher brightness, it is difficult to read.
Example below:
Link to section ...
> 72% of all respondents were eligible to participate in our Professional Developer section. Of those eligible, 70% agreed to participate, resulting in over 36,000 responses.
so... 70% of eligible people just agree to anything
@KevinB Yeah. Reading the description of what "visiting the same question multiple times" means, sounds like you quality if you visit the same question two times. Which you can easily do by accident. Or just by clicking links of similar questions.
knowledge silo = where someone in your organization (or a team) has information or skills that aren't shared across the organization knowledge repo = Stack Overflow?
@AndrewT. Thanks. OK, so the blog article used this in a confusing context: "how often do you encounter knowledge silos" - is it how many times you stumble upon stuff where you don't know about but only one person does, or how often you interact with that one person.
Can we see the original form of the survey questions. For example, the very first question in the Developer Profile, "Learning How to Code", it made it seem like you only learn from one source (when viewing the data by age).
I could have sworn that the question stated "check all that apply". He...
In this question, the answers are in very strange order. The best by votes and the selected by the OP is placed last:
Monthly operations time series with apply.monthly in R
If this was a just a bit more severe , I could miss seing the best answer entirely, and the only one that solves my issue.
J...
IDE usage overall is also flawed; a lot of people pick everything they've vaguely used once. VS Code might not be used as a driver IDE for a lot of people
BTW, JNat posted some feedback on the meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/417991/… responses. Basically "Thanks for the feedback, we'll try to be better next year" on a couple of answers that I saw (one mine one by Oleg). Maybe there is more feedback forthcoming.
Seems odd they deliberately held back generic platitude for after the survey results released. Instead of just addressing it immediately. It's insubstantial anyway.
I'm noticing that some responses have alternative breakdowns. And those are weird in some cases. Like some times, there is a breakdown by age for the answers. Other times not. For "Years coding" there is a breakdown by top 10 countries. But "Years coding professionally" doesn't.
There's a grammar mistake in the Stack Overflow Developer Survey results overview. The offending sentence is:
"Younger (under 18) respondents rely most on online resources and are most likely to of learned from online courses or certifications."
The word of should be have.
What's the right way...
Can we get some details of the breakdown of results of the open-ended questions in the 2021 Developer Survey?
In particular, when asked if we visited another developer community, we were asked to name them, but then no breakdown of what those other communities were was provided. What's the point ...
Maybe because you can almost not escape Node.js whatever you do. A lot of the JS tooling is there, so if you need anything that's a common task like bundling, transpilation, minification, etc. you need Node. Even if you just want to lint your code you need that.
Saying it's a "web framework or technology" makes about as much sense as claiming that doors are very often used by Fortune 500 CEOs as well as ordinary people. Yes, but so what? You have to use a door to get places.
Asynchronous tools? That's a very odd way to collect these. I'd say these are more organisation tools.
...and I scrolled down to see "synchronous tools". Which is...isn't exactly correct. They are communication tools. But I can still write somebody in MS Teams and they can respond later.
they displayed SO for Teams above jira, even though jira has 12k more users indicating they like it.
if you look through the respondent counts in that chart, jira is the clear winner, followed by confluence (which is owned by the same company and is often integrated with jira)
It's the paradox of scores. The more users you have scoring something, the more of a chance some might say they don't completely like it. It's like when you go on amazon and sort by score - if an item has ten thousand 5-stars reviews but also some other reviews, it'd be ranked lower than an item with just three 5-start reviews. Because the average of the latter is higher. Yet, more people would have liked the former.
https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2022/#section-experience-years-of-professional-coding-experience-by-developer-type
The average student apparently has nearly five years of professional coding experience.
Presumably what you're actually showing is total coding experience, not professional.
I don't understand this chart. For example, there are two lines between Java and Python. Does that mean that Java developers want to use Python and Python developers want to use Java? If so, what does the one line that is between Java and TypeScript mean - is it Java devs wanting to learn TS or the opposite?
It does actually say what it is but...it's white text on yellow background:
OK, so the line that maches the language is "people who used this, want to use this other thing". I had to zoom into my screenshot to be able to read it.
> More people learning to code have visited Collectives on Stack Overflow, suggesting it’s a good resource for people who are getting up to speed on a new-to-them technology.
Erm... or doesn't mean anything. Because I can hardly call it a "resource". With the slightly more than a dozen articles that were up when the survey was going. The rest of the collectives isn't a "resource" any more than what SO is. It's just tags with a picture to them
@KevinB I'd go one step further and just call that interpretation "false advertising"
Or "creative interpretation of the statistics".
If the results were flipped, then the interpretation would have been "Collectives is super awesome for professional developers who clearly find value in it"
This week, we're rolling out a test to update the appearance of voting arrows for both questions and answers, which will bring some accessibility gains, namely affordance, feedback, and meeting WCAG compliance; it also maintains aesthetic cohesiveness between services, by bringing them in line wi...
I don't get A/B testing purely visual overhaul of the arrow buttons. The function is unchanged as is their position. I sincerely doubt anybody who didn't know where the buttons were or what they did would be affected by the change. Conversely, I don't believe anybody familiar with them would find any change with the interaction ("easier" or "harder"). Or how would you even compare usage statistics anyway?
It looks like I can only 'recover' my password on this site. What do I do if I need to reset my password?
There is a similar question here involving use of 'forget-password' but no 'change-password' as such.
@NewPosts great, queued my userscript breaking soon
@NewPosts how about putting some actionable guidance for voting into the tour, btw? Or a rewamp of the reminder to not forget to vote on answers? Users don't click on those buttons because they (a) don't care; (b) don't know it is expected (queue self-serving comments to vote/accept); not because the buttons do not look "button" enough
I just don't understand the need to constantly mistate things. If you already know you're going to want to get X Y and Z out of the data, make that the data you collect. I don't even think it's malicious. just... iunno. careless.
eh, isn't it what marketing is about? Intentionally misinterpeting data so as it fits your goals with a sprinkle of superficial references to Statistics™ to sell whatever crap you are making to the suits?
We understand that this survey section was not clearly introduced. If we do another professional series we will ensure that the text is more clear. — David Gibson11 mins ago