Slashdot Mirror


Stack Overflow Reveals Which Programming Languages Are Most Used At Night (stackoverflow.blog)

Stack Overflow data scientist David Robinson recently calculated when people visit the popular programming question-and-answer site, but then also calculated whether those results differed by programming language. Quoting his results:
  • "C# programmers start and stop their day earlier, and tend to use the language less in the evenings. This might be because C# is often used at finance and enterprise software companies, which often start earlier and have rigid schedules."
  • "C programmers start the day a bit later, keep using the language in the evening, and stay up the longest. This suggests C may be particularly popular among hobbyist programmers who code during their free time (or perhaps among summer school students doing homework)."
  • "Python and Javascript are somewhere in between: Python and Javascript developers start and end the day a little later than C# users, and are a little less likely than C programmers to work in the evening."

The site also released an interactive app which lets users see how the results for other languages compared to C#, JavaScript, Python, and C, though of those four, "C# would count as the 'most nine-to-five,' and C as the least."

And they've also calculated the technologies used most between 9 to 5 (which "include many Microsoft technologies, such as SQL Server, Excel, VBA, and Internet Explorer, as well as technologies like SVN and Oracle that are frequently used at enterprise software companies.") Meanwhile, the technologies most often used outside the 9-5 workday "include web frameworks like Firebase, Meteor, and Express, as well as graphics libraries like OpenGL and Unity. The functional language Haskell is the tag most visited outside of the workday; only half of its visits happen between 9 and 5."


2 of 99 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Incoherrent Measure by Sperbels · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Are you saying professional programmers never need help? I've been a professional for 20 years, and coding for 30 years. I still find stack overflow extremely useful. I don't understand the hate.

  2. Re:Look at the graphs by quantaman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Just look at the graphs. It is almost possible that these "numbers" are within statistical error. Every single language I've looked at using their graph has the EXACT same trend line, with only a very subtle variation of up/down by a fraction of a percentage.

    Close, but unless they they did smoothing I suspect the effect is statistically significant, there really is a bigger drop-off for C#

    Interestingly Linux has a bigger day vs night drop-off than C.

    --
    I stole this Sig