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The most popular programming languages for 2014 are …
Venture Beat ^ | 02/27/2014 | J.O. Dell

Posted on 02/27/2014 7:57:31 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Have mercy: It looks like C# is staging a comeback.

Have mercy: It looks like C# is staging a comeback.

CodeEval has named its top coding languages for 2014, and we see a couple of interesting surprises. Year-over-year, C# was the second-fastest growing language. And Internet powerhouse PHP was the biggest loser, down 55 percent from 2012.

We took a look at the trends from 2011 through 2013, and here’s what we found:

Most & least popular programming languages

By volume, Python and Java reigned supreme. But Java, as you can see, is something of an ailing giant despite the popularity of Android with consumers.

When you look at percentage change from 2011 to the present, iOS coding language Objective-C is still going strong. But check out C#! This Microsoft technology is still small in sheer volume, but it’s growing quickly:

Most & least popular programming languages

Some of us were less surprised than others. Take Gregg Pollack from Code School.

“C# is the language of the Microsoft developer. There have been lots of improvements to the language over the past 10 years, so this isn’t that surprising,” he told VentureBeat via email.

He also had some thoughts on Java’s decline:

Interpreted languages like Python and Ruby have better language design and thus are more pleasant to program with. This fuels the open source community around the languages, which encourages cutting edge developers (and thus, startups) to adopt them. The bigger corporations slowly follow.
In my experience many Java developers have moved to these interpreted languages.

CodeEval gathered this data “based on thousands of data points we’ve collected by processing over 100,000+ coding tests and challenges by over 2,000+ employers,” according to the company blog.

The company enables devs to show off, particularly to potential clients and/or employers, by completing coding challenges created (or merely chosen from a library) by employers. Devs are rewarded with cash and prized for their efforts.CodeEval has named its top coding languages for 2014, and we see a couple of interesting surprises. Year-over-year, C# was the second-fastest growing language. And Internet powerhouse PHP was the biggest loser, down 55 percent from 2012.

We took a look at the trends from 2011 through 2013, and here’s what we found:

Most & least popular programming languages

By volume, Python and Java reigned supreme. But Java, as you can see, is something of an ailing giant despite the popularity of Android with consumers.

When you look at percentage change from 2011 to the present, iOS coding language Objective-C is still going strong. But check out C#! This Microsoft technology is still small in sheer volume, but it’s growing quickly:

Most & least popular programming languages

Some of us were less surprised than others. Take Gregg Pollack from Code School.

“C# is the language of the Microsoft developer. There have been lots of improvements to the language over the past 10 years, so this isn’t that surprising,” he told VentureBeat via email.

He also had some thoughts on Java’s decline:

Interpreted languages like Python and Ruby have better language design and thus are more pleasant to program with. This fuels the open source community around the languages, which encourages cutting edge developers (and thus, startups) to adopt them. The bigger corporations slowly follow.
In my experience many Java developers have moved to these interpreted languages.

CodeEval gathered this data “based on thousands of data points we’ve collected by processing over 100,000+ coding tests and challenges by over 2,000+ employers,” according to the company blog.

The company enables devs to show off, particularly to potential clients and/or employers, by completing coding challenges created (or merely chosen from a library) by employers. Devs are rewarded with cash and prized for their efforts.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: coding; languages; programming
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To: circlecity

PL1 - and God help you if you slipped in the snow and dropped em.


81 posted on 02/27/2014 3:42:50 PM PST by eldoradude (GOP - stands for Gay Obama Posse. "John" Roberts with a Boehner...need I say more?)
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To: RJS1950

If you’re going to do Web Development in Java, Apache Wicket is the only way to go, especially to incorporate JQuery/Twitter Bootstrap or other similar frameworks.


82 posted on 02/27/2014 3:48:04 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: Nowhere Man
OBONGO SUCKSOBONGO SUCKSOBONGO SUCKSOBONGO SUCKS...

Nice. I got suspended in the 6th grade decades ago for that exact scenario. Us lucky kids got to use a terminal hooked up to Stanford...my printout was of a four letter word that ran on for about 8 feet of paper before the teacher saw it.

83 posted on 02/27/2014 3:56:49 PM PST by eldoradude (GOP - stands for Gay Obama Posse. "John" Roberts with a Boehner...need I say more?)
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To: dfwgator

I wouldn’t use Java for any web development. Despite the hype over the years it is slow, klunky and a resource hog. I’ll give it one thing though, when it was first released it was better than developing websites using C++ but that isn’t saying much.


84 posted on 02/27/2014 4:00:20 PM PST by RJS1950 (The democrats are the "enemies foreign and domestic" cited in the federal oath)
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To: proxy_user

Yes, and you have your answer about how slow their Java web app is.


85 posted on 02/27/2014 4:02:14 PM PST by RJS1950 (The democrats are the "enemies foreign and domestic" cited in the federal oath)
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To: MCH

Nope no comal. Just Basic until I needed to do things you could not do in basic on a 1.02 MHz CPU and went straight to assembly. Left 8x86 assembly off my list


86 posted on 02/27/2014 5:11:33 PM PST by HamiltonJay
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To: eldoradude
Nice. I got suspended in the 6th grade decades ago for that exact scenario. Us lucky kids got to use a terminal hooked up to Stanford...my printout was of a four letter word that ran on for about 8 feet of paper before the teacher saw it.

Heh! I remember one time, one of my friends went to a display computer with a voice synthesizer at a store. He changed the program to say at 12:00 from "Good afternoon" to "Oh sh#$, it's noon!" This must have been back in 1983 or so. I remember then as well, we used the biology department's Apple ][+'s where we played around with the SAM speech synthesizer program. I got the popular psychological program Eliza to work with the SAM program as well as a random insult generator. We also had a setup where we can hook up a monitoring system to the Apple to monitor things like heart rate and oxygen levels much like hospitals do today. My mother was in the hospital several times prior to passing away from her cancer 3 months ago and I remember then having those probes on her fingers and I commented, "we did that way back in 1983!"

BTW, I remember on out TI's, my friend and I wrote a program that went down the screen in a sine wave, "E.T. has V.D." but again, this was 1982/83. B-) I got a TI for Christmas of 1982 so he had to get one.
87 posted on 02/27/2014 6:23:30 PM PST by Nowhere Man (Mom I miss you! (8-20-1938 to 11-18-2013) Cancer sucks)
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