On Friday, March 30, 2018 at 10:45:35 AM UTC-5, Terry Reedy wrote: > https://www.jetbrains.com/research/python-developers-survey-2017/ > “Which version of Python do you use the most?” > 2014 80% 2.x, 20% 3.x > 2016 60% 2.x, 40% 3.x > 2017 25% 2.x, 75% 3.x > > This is a bigger jump than I anticipated.
If these stats are true, i would caution not to draw any rash conclusions from them. Even *IF* there are more Python3 programmers today than Python2 (and personally, i'm not buying it!), what *REALLY* matters is the following: (1) Has the total number of Python programmers remained steady? (or has it increased or decreased?) (2) What percentage of the Python3 users are merely students who use Python (probably against their will) as part of university studies, and thus, will abandon the language when (and *IF*) they move into the professional world. (3) Of the aforementioned students, how many are training to become actual programmers? My suspicion is that not only are the overall numbers of Python programmers on the decline (Thanks, Python3000!), but the folks who are using Python are mostly students who will abandon the language when they leave university. In the end, the property which matters _most_ here is quaLity not quaNtity. IOWs: a hundred professional grade softwares in the wild are more important than a billion hello world programs in the classroom. Which is another reason why i pay absolutely zero attention to the TIOBI index (nothin' but hype!). -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list