Danno wrote:
> Xah Lee wrote:
>> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
>> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
>> comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of
>> popularity trends.
>>
>> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.h
Xah Lee wrote:
> Computer Language Popularity Trend
>
> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
> comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of
> popul
Stefan Scholl wrote:
> In comp.lang.lisp Jon Ribbens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >>> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html
> >>
> >> Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments
> >> about languages :)
> >
> > I j
At Wednesday 27/9/2006 13:51, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> You can also get a rough measure ot the popularity of web scripting
> languages from an analysis of the URLs. The last time I did this was in
> 2003, and as I recall, these were the results:
> PHP 30% and increasing
> Perl 28% and falling
John Bailo wrote:
> Xah Lee wrote:
> > Computer Language Popularity Trend
> >
> > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
> > indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups.
>
> The only problem being that in the last five ye
Sherm Pendley wrote:
> "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>
>>Xah Lee wrote:
>>
>>>Computer Language Popularity Trend
>>>
>>
>>Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments
>
>
> Su
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> I don't think you can use any measure as an accurate yardstick, but
> rather as an impressionistic canvas.
Exactly. You can't measure "popularity" without defining the term.
Xah Lee appears to define popularity based on the number of posts made
in a given language's U
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> At the site I'm working on, you'd see a URL like
> http://www.whatever.com/login or http://www.whatever.com/boards?id=131
> -- how would you count them? Such (extensionless) URLs are far more
> common in the Python, Ruby, and Java world in my experience than the
> PHP, P
There is one index at : http://www.tiobe.com/tpci.htm
It isn't much reliable, put still I think it is a bit reliable.
Also, you might use number of open source projects at Sourceforge for
the given language for giving assumptions, or number of job openings at
Monster, i.e.
--
Mladen Adamov
Xah Lee wrote:
> Computer Language Popularity Trend
>
> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups.
The only problem being that in the last five years, there are now a
multiplicity of options for
In comp.lang.lisp Jon Ribbens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html
>>
>> Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments
>> about languages :)
>
> I just read "PHP as a language is rath
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Mirco Wahab wrote:
>
>When the Samurai of medieval Japan were confronted
>with new 'battlefield language', e.g. early Shotguns,
"early Shotguns" :D. Your mastery of the history of
firearms overwhelms me.
--
Christopher Mattern
"Which one you figure
Joe Marshall wrote:
> Xah Lee wrote:
>
>>Computer Language Popularity Trend
>>
>>This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
>>indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
>>comprehensive or fair survey, but d
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> You can also get a rough measure ot the popularity of web scripting
> languages from an analysis of the URLs. The last time I did this was in
> 2003, and as I recall, these were the results:
> PHP 30% and increasing
> Perl 28% and falling
> ASP 25% and falling fast
> Cold
Xah Lee wrote:
> Computer Language Popularity Trend
>
> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
> comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of
> populari
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Xah Lee wrote:
>> Computer Language Popularity Trend
>>
>
> Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments
Such things are all Xah does. Look at the distribution list for this
message -
I, too, attempt to track the popularity of computer languages, but I
like to look at the job boards. My theory is that the number of
employers looking for particular skills indicates the relative
popularity of the language. This is a somewhat crude measure,
particularly with Microsoft technologies
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Xah Lee wrote:
>> Computer Language Popularity Trend
>>
>> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
>> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
>> comprehensive or fair sur
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html
>
> Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments
> about languages :)
I just read "PHP as a language is rather dry and business-like",
and fell off my chair.
--
http://mail.p
Xah Lee wrote:
> Computer Language Popularity Trend
>
> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
> comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of
> popu
On 9/27/06, Mirco Wahab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thus spoke Xah Lee (on 2006-09-27 05:03):
>
> > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's
> > popularity, as indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups.
> > ...
> > http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html
>
> When the Samurai of
Thus spoke Xah Lee (on 2006-09-27 05:03):
> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's
> popularity, as indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups.
> ...
> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html
When the Samurai of medieval Japan were confronted
with new 'battlefield language',
Xah Lee wrote:
> Computer Language Popularity Trend
>
> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
> comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of
> popu
Computer Language Popularity Trend
This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as
indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a
comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of
popularity trends.
http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index
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