An anonymous reader quotes Ars Technica:

Sourcegraph, a company specializing in universal code search, polled more than 500 North American software developers to identify issues in code complexity and management. Its general findings are probably no surprise to most Ars readers — software has gotten bigger, more complex, and much more important in the past ten years — but the sheer scope can be surprising… When asked how the size of the codebase across their entire company, measured in megabytes and the number of repositories, has changed in the past decade, over half (51%) of software development stakeholders reported they have more than 100 times the volume of code they had 10 years ago. And a staggering 18% say they have 500 times more code.

Ars also reports another surprising finding: 91% of the surveyed developers said their non-technology company “functions more like a technology company than it did ten years ago.

“This won’t surprise anyone who has noticed firms like Walmart Labs sponsoring open source technology conferences and delivering presentations.”

of this story at Slashdot.

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Source:: Slashdot