Probably not a great data source for your purpose; heavily biased towards git user transcripts (ssh-keygen > ps?)
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Agree that it's definitely biased, but I don't expect it to have "worse" bias than I'd get by polling people myself?
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It’s interesting, but I think you might get better self-reported data, yes (maybe you could just strip out the git-related stuff?)
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Yeah, that's a good idea for some things, although I wouldn't be surprised if `git` were in the top10 for people I might poll.
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If I look at my own history, git is my #2 most commonly run command on my home machine. I'm not claiming that this is unbiased, but...
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Huh, it’s #5 for me (surprising!) but also in a diff. order of magnitude from “cd”, “ls”, and “(editor)”.
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emacs is very low for me because I just start it up once per reboot. git is high for me because the machine is new so I git clone a lot.
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Ok, but wait: ssh-keygen!
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Yeah, that seems a sign of bias. Users who recently learned how to use github use ssh-keygen, more likely to accidentally upload history?
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I suspect the data would be quite different if it were by number of invocations (maybe user weighted) and not percentage of users.
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Let me see if I can reproduce this easily... seems like it shouldn't be super hard if the guy's script still works?
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