On Tuesday, 22 December 2015 at 21:38:22 UTC, ZombineDev wrote:
On Tuesday, 22 December 2015 at 17:49:34 UTC, Jakob Jenkov wrote:
On Tuesday, 22 December 2015 at 03:30:32 UTC, ShinraTensei wrote:
I recently noticed massive increase in new languages for a person to jump into(Nim, Rust, Go...etc) but my question is weather the D is actually used anywhere or are there chances of it dying anytime soon.


Check out Google Trends. Searches for D Tutorial still beats searches for Scala Tutorial by a big margin:

https://google.com/trends/explore#q=d%20tutorial%2C%20scala%20tutorial

Google Trends shows something interesting:
https://google.com/trends/explore#q=%2Fm%2F01kbt7%2C%20%2Fm%2F0dsbpg6%2C%20%2Fm%2F091hdj%2C%20%2Fm%2F03j_q%2C%20C%2B%2B&cmpt=q&tz=Etc%2FGMT-2

restrict it to 'programming' to get a more accurate assessment of D.
https://google.com/trends/explore#cat=0-5-31&q=%2Fm%2F01kbt7%2C%20%2Fm%2F0dsbpg6%2C%20%2Fm%2F091hdj%2C%20%2Fm%2F03j_q&date=1%2F2010%2061m&cmpt=q&tz=Etc%2FGMT-2

removed C++ because it just dwarfs the others.
D, as I expected, has a massive following in Japan. I'm still not quite sure why.

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