RE: [Python-Dev] Re: Re: 2.4 news reaches interesting places
[Stephan Deibel] #- For example, a September article in InfoWorld said "But the #- big winner #- this time around is the object-oriented scripting language #- Python, which #- saw a 6 percent gain in popularity, almost doubling last #- year's results." How big are the chances that SourceForge numbers actually could be extrapolated to the rest of the universe? According to them (check software map, and look by programming language), and showing everything with a "developers choice for their project" share >= 2%: C++ 18.5 C 18.1 Java 17.5 PHP 12.9 Perl 7.2 Python 4.7 Visual Basic 2.6 C# 2.6 JavaScript 2.6 Delphi/Kylix 2.1 Unix Shell 2.0 It also would nice to see a graph showing tendencies here. . Facundo
On Mon, 13 Dec 2004, Batista, Facundo wrote:
[Stephan Deibel]
#- For example, a September article in InfoWorld said "But the #- big winner #- this time around is the object-oriented scripting language #- Python, which #- saw a 6 percent gain in popularity, almost doubling last #- year's results."
How big are the chances that SourceForge numbers actually could be extrapolated to the rest of the universe?
Not very good, I think. I suspect the vast majority of programmers have never heard of source forge. I'm actually surprised that it's only 4.7% on source forge -- that seems to indicate Python is doing quite a bit better in the non-open source world than on SF. Interesting... wouldn't be surprised if this is because the speed myth has stronger hold among hacker types than business programmer types. If people feel this is getting off-topic for python-dev, there is also the mostly dormant marketing-python list: http://wingware.com/mailman/listinfo/marketing-python (the trolls have been removed) - Stephan
participants (2)
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Batista, Facundo -
Stephan Deibel