On Fri, 26 June 2009, Peter Baumann wrote: > On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 09:22:50PM +0200, Jakub Narebski wrote: > > The *test* version of this year survey can be now found at > > the following URL (as in previous year, we use Survs.com) > > > > http://www.survs.com/survey?id=2PIMZGU0&channel=TFN2Y52K7Y > > > > Please tell me what you think about questions and about selection > > of possible answers in single choice/multiple choice questions. > > If you have better idea for theme (mainly background and font > > colors, and perhaps font size), help would be appreciated. Is it > > better to use vertical form everywhere, or should we use horizontal > > layout of answers for questions with short number of possible > > answers? How long does it take to fill survey? > > Remarks: > > - I find the visual layout of footnotes to 10 ("What do you use to edit contents under > version control with Git? What kind of editor, IDE or RAD you use working > with Git?") a little distracting. Could those at least be seperated by a newline? This is unfortunately technical limitation of Survs.com. It replaces run of empty lines with _single_ linebreak in text elements. I have submitted request for more rich formatting options (like whitelist HTML) as feedback, but for the time being (if it didn't get accepted before "Git User's Survey 2009" is run) I can simply divide those "footnotes" in more than one text element. > > - I'm not sure if question 16 ("How often do you use the following forms of git > commands or extra git tools?") isn't a little too much. At least I got scared by looking > at all questions in there and I imagine that people get easily bored answering them. > > - The same might be true for question 17 and 18. As you probably remember question "16/17. How often do you use the following forms of git commands or extra git tools?" wasn't present in first two drafts of Git User's Survey 2009. It was only added at request from #git channel. On one hand side this question allows responders to get to know git commands and forms of git commands they wouldn't otherwise know about. So it can be seen as learning tool. Answers to this question are also quite interesting from the point of view of analysing git usage(s). On the other hand side this question is very long; so long that due to technical limits had to be split in two. It is time-consuming and quite scary. Also one can get similar statistics from filtered history; we could also create version of git which would gather such statistics and at request of user would aggregate responses and format for sending (or even send via email), similarly to what Linux Counter does. Possible solution would be to delete this question (again). Alternatively this question could be marked explicitly as optional (even though all questions are optional in this survey), and put it in separate page with more difficult / time consuming questions. > > > Overall, I like the survey. Thanks! Thank you very much for taking your time to test this survey, and to write your comments about it. -- Jakub Narebski Poland -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html