Are your skills up to date?
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Seen this link in another forum, figured I'd share...not sure how accurate it is though... http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html[^] Seems C# would have been a poor choice as it seems to be falling in popularity. :P Thankfully C/C++ and PHP are relatively high. :)
I'm finding the only constant in software development is change it self.
The rise and fall indicators seem to only relate to the previous month as the survey is done monthly. If you look at the long term trend either on the graph below or by clicking on the links for each language, you'll see that c and c++ are falling whereas c# is rising
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Wow...that was embarrassing. Maybe you should review math and percentages. If their current share is 0.436% and it rose 0.44% their previous market share was about 0.434% (prev. share x 1.0044 = 0.436)
"When you have made evil the means of survival, do not expect men to remain good. Do not expect them to stay moral and lose their lives for the purpose of becoming the fodder of the immoral. Do not expect them to produce, when production is punished and looting rewarded. Do not ask, `Who is destroying the world?' You are."
-Atlas Shrugged, Ayn RandRohde wrote:
Wow...that was embarrassing. Maybe you should review math and percentages. If their current share is 0.436% and it rose 0.44% their previous market share was about 0.434% (prev. share x 1.0044 = 0.436)
Hmmmm - don't think so. Remember that the Tiobe index is measured in %, so a delta signified in % could either be a % change in the popularity value or an absolute change in that popularity value. So, let's look at the historical trends[^] - specifically Python, as it has a relatively big change - +2% over the last 12 months. It's currently @ 5% share, it was at roughly 3% share last July. If the delta was 2% of the current 5% then Python would have been at 4.9%.
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Please, let's keep that private ;P
only two letters away from being an asset
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Seen this link in another forum, figured I'd share...not sure how accurate it is though... http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html[^] Seems C# would have been a poor choice as it seems to be falling in popularity. :P Thankfully C/C++ and PHP are relatively high. :)
I'm finding the only constant in software development is change it self.
Disappointed Groovy isn't represented.
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Powershell - Current share = 0.436% , a rise of 0.44% - so Powershell previously had -0.004%...;P Maybe their maths needs more work...
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Which basically doesn't count the majority of microsoft programmers as they have the msdn disks and don't heve to go grubbing around the internet to find stuff.
pseudonym67 My Articles[^] Beginning KDevelop Programming[^]
pseudonym67 wrote:
Which basically doesn't count the majority of microsoft programmers as they have the msdn disks and don't heve to go grubbing around the internet to find stuff.
True, but for all the abstruse stuff you have to go to the Web anyway, that's the only place for FRESH information (more than once I've used out-of-date info from the disks, so I often go straight to MSDN online).
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not bad! But that probably works only for geek girls.
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
blog: TDD - the Aha! | Linkify!| FoldWithUs! | sighist -
Seen this link in another forum, figured I'd share...not sure how accurate it is though... http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html[^] Seems C# would have been a poor choice as it seems to be falling in popularity. :P Thankfully C/C++ and PHP are relatively high. :)
I'm finding the only constant in software development is change it self.
That site's page starts with index.php I bet if the site was index.aspx it would show that C# is gaining in popularity.
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Seen this link in another forum, figured I'd share...not sure how accurate it is though... http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html[^] Seems C# would have been a poor choice as it seems to be falling in popularity. :P Thankfully C/C++ and PHP are relatively high. :)
I'm finding the only constant in software development is change it self.
Wow, C# is going down :( I guess this is a .NET Framework 3.5 fault. C# 2.0 was reaaly very successful.