r/softwaredevelopment
Software development methodologies, techniques, and tools. Not to be confused with programming. Covering Agile, RUP, Waterfall, Crystal, Extreme Programming, Scrum, Lean, Kanban and more.
r/softwaredevelopment Subreddit Stats & Analytics
r/softwaredevelopment is a Programming & Development subreddit in the Nerds category with 148,225 members. Use this page to track r/softwaredevelopment stats, subscriber growth trends, daily and weekly analytics, and similar subreddits with related audiences.
Recent r/softwaredevelopment growth: +265 members today (+0.18%) and +1,148 members this week (+0.78%).
Browse more Programming & Development subredditsReddit topics and subreddit categories.
Similar subreddits to r/softwaredevelopment include r/SoftwareEngineering, r/Development, r/software, r/softwarearchitecture, r/AskComputerScience.
r/softwaredevelopment Current Stats
r/softwaredevelopment Growth Analytics
Daily Growth Chart (30 days)
Similar Subreddits to r/softwaredevelopment
Questions and discussions about Software Development
Anything software-related. Please follow our rules to avoid getting punished.
Dive into discussions on designing, structuring, and optimizing software systems. Share insights on architectural patterns, best practices, and real-world experiences.
Ask Computer Science Questions And Get Answers! This subreddit is intended for questions about topics that might be taught by a computer science department at a university.
Ask questions about programming.
A space to discuss and keep up with software development and your software career.
Share your knowledge, ask questions, and engage with other members of the community.
A subreddit to ask questions about anything coding/programming related.
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.