The survey was very specific, it even asked which parts of the stock tables I use more frequently than others. I answered that I never use earnings column, that I rarely used the dividend/yield column and that I always use the last price and change column. It even asked if I use the company name and ticker columns.
When the WSJ got rid of most of it's stock tables and other statistics, I didn't put up a stink about it. I know that newspapers are getting hurt from digital media competition and they need to cut costs. The WSJ claimed it could save millions on ink by eliminating much of the statistics. But then they started ballyhooing that they are covering sports now. If they can afford the ink for sports coverage, then they can afford it for market statistics. I canceled my print WSJ subscription last month.