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Popularity of programming languages

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  • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

    Clickety[^] I was discussing with Nish about this yesterday. I had no doubts about Java being the most popular (esp. because of schools) but what is surprising is the difference between popularity of C# and Java. No surprises about VB.NET I have seen many former VB programmers moving to C#. Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures. I have serious doubts about some of the statistics that is presented. What do you guys think?


    My Blog

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    Shog9 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

    Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures.

    That's what being around for thirty-some more years will do, i guess. ;)

    Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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    • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

      Clickety[^] I was discussing with Nish about this yesterday. I had no doubts about Java being the most popular (esp. because of schools) but what is surprising is the difference between popularity of C# and Java. No surprises about VB.NET I have seen many former VB programmers moving to C#. Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures. I have serious doubts about some of the statistics that is presented. What do you guys think?


      My Blog

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      Jeremy Falcon
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      How come ASP.NET isn't listed but PHP is? :confused: [edit] Nevermind, I read this at the bottom: "ASP and ASP.NET are also not because it is regarded a technique that makes use of other languages such as JavaScript and VBScript or .NET compatible languages." [/edit] Jeremy Falcon

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      • J Jeremy Falcon

        How come ASP.NET isn't listed but PHP is? :confused: [edit] Nevermind, I read this at the bottom: "ASP and ASP.NET are also not because it is regarded a technique that makes use of other languages such as JavaScript and VBScript or .NET compatible languages." [/edit] Jeremy Falcon

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        Shog9 0
        wrote on last edited by
        #4

        PHP is it's own language - what language would ASP.NET map to?

        Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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        • S Shog9 0

          Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

          Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures.

          That's what being around for thirty-some more years will do, i guess. ;)

          Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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          Douglas Troy
          wrote on last edited by
          #5

          or maybe ... NETCOBOL[^] ... nah. More likely the fact that there are probably thousands of mainframes out there, still running COBOL based applications that won't be replaced because (1) they just work and (2) companies have better things to spend money on than replacing applications that, well, just work ...


          :..::. Douglas H. Troy ::..
          Bad Astronomy |Development Blogging|Viksoe.dk's Site

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          • S Shog9 0

            PHP is it's own language - what language would ASP.NET map to?

            Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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            Red Stateler
            wrote on last edited by
            #6

            There's an explanation at the bottom that says asp.net is not a language, but a technology made up of different languages. So I guess asp.net written in C# would go under C#.

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            • S Shog9 0

              PHP is it's own language - what language would ASP.NET map to?

              Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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              Christian Graus
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              C# or VB.NET, I guess... Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++

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              • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                Clickety[^] I was discussing with Nish about this yesterday. I had no doubts about Java being the most popular (esp. because of schools) but what is surprising is the difference between popularity of C# and Java. No surprises about VB.NET I have seen many former VB programmers moving to C#. Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures. I have serious doubts about some of the statistics that is presented. What do you guys think?


                My Blog

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                Christian Graus
                wrote on last edited by
                #8

                I guess the question is, popular with who ? Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++

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                • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                  Clickety[^] I was discussing with Nish about this yesterday. I had no doubts about Java being the most popular (esp. because of schools) but what is surprising is the difference between popularity of C# and Java. No surprises about VB.NET I have seen many former VB programmers moving to C#. Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures. I have serious doubts about some of the statistics that is presented. What do you guys think?


                  My Blog

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                  El Corazon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #9

                  One can argue the selection of architecture vs. language+architecture making unfair splits of "languages" but that looks "reasonable" from my experience. It could easily be manipulated by statistics, and the assumption is "high score == popularity" which may be a big assumption. The ratings are calculated by counting hits of the most popular search engines. Cobol being around for a long time gets hits just from new people saying ":wtf: is Cobol". Ada and Pascal will unfortunately get bonuses for historical references to names. Cobol is getting a resurgance with OO version of Cobol2002, but again that pretty much leaves the search results mostly from people curious more than supporters. Lisp is used as a scripting language for things like Autocad, as well as the historical references in AI and jokes about old timers "talking with a Lisp" leaves the new folks again saying :wtf: and searching and boosting the "popularity" score.... A high searching score may mean high popularity during a search, but may indicate curiosity more than popularity of the language, assumptions of popularity based on google searches. Plus if you google-battle C++ vs Java then google-battle Java vs C then google-battle Java vs C# you just boosted Java with three searches vs. one for each of the others. :) _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                  • S Shog9 0

                    Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

                    Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures.

                    That's what being around for thirty-some more years will do, i guess. ;)

                    Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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                    El Corazon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #10

                    Shog9 wrote:

                    That's what being around for thirty-some more years will do, i guess.

                    Or could mean that Cobol jokes (Cobol causes brain damage) are leaving new programmers curiously querying Cobol. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                    • D Douglas Troy

                      or maybe ... NETCOBOL[^] ... nah. More likely the fact that there are probably thousands of mainframes out there, still running COBOL based applications that won't be replaced because (1) they just work and (2) companies have better things to spend money on than replacing applications that, well, just work ...


                      :..::. Douglas H. Troy ::..
                      Bad Astronomy |Development Blogging|Viksoe.dk's Site

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                      El Corazon
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #11

                      or COBOL2002 initiative.... oops I googled, I just boosted COBOL's ranking.... http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=cobol+2002[^] :laugh: _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                      • E El Corazon

                        Shog9 wrote:

                        That's what being around for thirty-some more years will do, i guess.

                        Or could mean that Cobol jokes (Cobol causes brain damage) are leaving new programmers curiously querying Cobol. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                        Shog9 0
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #12

                        It looks like the results are based on search results, not # of searches, so unless the new programmers are posting lots of questions on lots of indexed message boards it shouldn't matter. :~

                        Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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                        • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                          Clickety[^] I was discussing with Nish about this yesterday. I had no doubts about Java being the most popular (esp. because of schools) but what is surprising is the difference between popularity of C# and Java. No surprises about VB.NET I have seen many former VB programmers moving to C#. Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures. I have serious doubts about some of the statistics that is presented. What do you guys think?


                          My Blog

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                          J4amieC
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #13

                          Im astounded that the PlainEnglish(tm) language isnt there, or maybe PlainItalian, PlainCroation or one of those other wonderful languages.

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                          • S Shog9 0

                            It looks like the results are based on search results, not # of searches, so unless the new programmers are posting lots of questions on lots of indexed message boards it shouldn't matter. :~

                            Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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                            El Corazon
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #14

                            Shog9 wrote:

                            It looks like the results are based on search results, not # of searches, so unless the new programmers are posting lots of questions on lots of indexed message boards it shouldn't matter.

                            CP shows up in google... just imagine what this thread is generating! ;) If we go multi-page we'll generate more results.... Forums make interesting additions to searches because the results get stretched, signatures about Cobol causing brain damage are still pretty common. A thread comparing even the change in hatred of Cobol to the new hatred of VB boosts both. :) So yes, questions, comments, jokes, signatures all make a change in results. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                            • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                              Clickety[^] I was discussing with Nish about this yesterday. I had no doubts about Java being the most popular (esp. because of schools) but what is surprising is the difference between popularity of C# and Java. No surprises about VB.NET I have seen many former VB programmers moving to C#. Another surprising thing is that Ruby doesnot figure in the top 20 and that COBOL figures. I have serious doubts about some of the statistics that is presented. What do you guys think?


                              My Blog

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                              Marc Clifton
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #15

                              The ratings are based on the world-wide availability of skilled engineers, courses and third party vendors. That really has no bearing on what people actually use. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures

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                              • E El Corazon

                                Shog9 wrote:

                                It looks like the results are based on search results, not # of searches, so unless the new programmers are posting lots of questions on lots of indexed message boards it shouldn't matter.

                                CP shows up in google... just imagine what this thread is generating! ;) If we go multi-page we'll generate more results.... Forums make interesting additions to searches because the results get stretched, signatures about Cobol causing brain damage are still pretty common. A thread comparing even the change in hatred of Cobol to the new hatred of VB boosts both. :) So yes, questions, comments, jokes, signatures all make a change in results. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                                Shog9 0
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #16

                                Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:

                                CP shows up in google...

                                Heh... The forums aren't supposed to. But looks like Chris has a different robots.txt file for secure.codeproject.com, so they end up being indexed anyway. Oops...

                                Now taking suggestions for the next release of CPhog...

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                                • M Marc Clifton

                                  The ratings are based on the world-wide availability of skilled engineers, courses and third party vendors. That really has no bearing on what people actually use. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures

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                                  Jeremy Falcon
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #17

                                  Yes it does. Markets always indicate popularity. It's supply and demand in action. Jeremy Falcon

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                                  • J J4amieC

                                    Im astounded that the PlainEnglish(tm) language isnt there, or maybe PlainItalian, PlainCroation or one of those other wonderful languages.

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                                    Rama Krishna Vavilala
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #18

                                    BTW Click here[^] and scroll down to the bottom.


                                    My Blog

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                                    • M Marc Clifton

                                      The ratings are based on the world-wide availability of skilled engineers, courses and third party vendors. That really has no bearing on what people actually use. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures

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                                      El Corazon
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #19

                                      Marc Clifton wrote:

                                      That really has no bearing on what people actually use.

                                      My resume is also in I think 5 different locations/pages (maybe more).... the net result is 5 times my experiences. Considering I think each resume was abandoned at different times, they all have a slight variant of growing languages, so all produce slightly different weights. However, since Basic, Pascal, Fortran and COBOL were all early on my list, those get a boost by each version of the resume. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                                      • J J4amieC

                                        Im astounded that the PlainEnglish(tm) language isnt there, or maybe PlainItalian, PlainCroation or one of those other wonderful languages.

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                                        Jeremy Falcon
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #20

                                        You should check out the new version, it's called Plain Telepathy Programming (PTP). Here's some example code...

                                        Jeremy Falcon

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                                        • J Jeremy Falcon

                                          You should check out the new version, it's called Plain Telepathy Programming (PTP). Here's some example code...

                                          Jeremy Falcon

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                                          Jorgen Sigvardsson
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #21

                                          :mad: Do you have to use foul language in your comments? You could've at least removed them before posting them in the lounge. X|

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