Beyond 6? Blimey! You must either either Tim Berners-Lee or Al Gore. Either way, it's nice to have someone of your stature on these forums![Unless you are Al Gore, in which case you can **** ***!]
I'm generally a 5, but as others have said, there are some big jumps there. There will be a few dozen people in the world who are generally a 6 - I reckon they won't be hanging around here though. That said, I could be sub-level 3 because I don't know how to use spacer GIFs...
They are seriously missing a level 5.5: Those who have learnt so much about HTML that they have passed beyond Guru into Psychotic-Eccentric - they tend to use Mosaic as their UA, they will have JavaScript and possible images disabled and are genuinely convinced that they can sense changes in the Matrix. Unfortunately, these guys are so warped that they can't actually develop usable sites or applications because writing one line of markup is followed by a year-long discussion about some minor sub-section of the W3C specification. Just try posting an 'Is validation really necessary?', or better still, a 'OMFG - Fluid layout suxxors!!' in the c.i.w.a.html group on USENET.
Simisker said:
I posed the questions as I was curious to know if there were any salaried developers left who were less than 'Level 5' [There can't be many now, surely?]. I also wanted to roughly gauge the level of the average salaried designer, and whether the number of designers who also do front-end coding was on the increase. Though it has since occurred to me that there are more developers than designers frequenting this forum, but hey: it's a straw poll, not a census.
I'm sure a big chunk of productive and worthwhile developers are between 4 & 5. Just have a look on the intertubes; things have improve a lot over the last 5 years, but that vast majority of new builds are XHTML Transitional! As for designers, I have a feeling (but only that) that the number of proper designers who code are shrinking. I think people have realised that coding an UI design are two different disciplines and that perhaps requires two different people - the exception is in smaller organisations where they don't have this luxury and one guy has to fulfil both roles.
But I reckon the biggest bloc is people like my brother-in-law who offers website builds to his clients. He knows nothing about HTML or CSS, or webstandards and accessibility, or the higher arts of photoshop for that matter. But he'll rattle of a new site with Frontpage, Dreamweaver or whatever and will get paid for it by and equally unenlighted customer. Most websites are still built by people who really don't know the basics.