In article <lcofuf54b5.fsf at gaffa.mit.edu>, Douglas Alan <nessus at mit.edu> wrote: >What's the source for Python being the "fastest growing programming >language"? Just curious. That's a stupid assertion; idiots, probably in marketing, are the only possible source for such an assertion. There are so many metrics of the "size" of a language (number of programmers, percentage of programmers, number of certified programmers, percentage of programmers certified in the language, percentage of certified programmers certified in the language, number of dollars in licensing revenue, percentage of licensing-revenue dollars, amount of existing code, number of dollars in consulting fees and salaries, percentage of dollars in consulting fees and salaries, number of people using software written in the language, percentage of computer users using software written in the language, number of computers with development tools for the language, percentage of computers (or of some particular kind of computers, such as PCs) with development tools for the language, number of CS classes taught in the language, percentage of CS classes taught in the language, number of productions in the grammar, number of bugs written in the language) and so many ways to compare growth (measuring by percentage growth or absolute numbers, and measuring over different time periods: the last day, the last week, the last month, the last year, the last two years, the last five years), and so many arbitrary ways to exclude languages from the list, that nearly every language can correctly, but meaninglessly, be said to be "the fastest growing computer language". A quick search on Google shows that Java, Visual Basic, Perl, and Smalltalk are all said to be "the fastest growing programming language", while C++ is said to be "the fastest growing computer language", Delphi is said to be "the fastest-growing language", and Python is asserted to be "the fastest-growing open-source scripting language" and "the fastest-growing scripting language". For what it's worth, I can't find any web pages that assert that COBOL is the fastest-growing anything, but I'm sure they're out there. (I just found lots of web pages saying that the fastest-growing something or other wants to hire COBOL programmers.) -- <kragen at pobox.com> Kragen Sitaker <http://www.pobox.com/~kragen/> Perilous to all of us are the devices of an art deeper than we possess ourselves. -- Gandalf the White [J.R.R. Tolkien, "The Two Towers", Bk 3, Ch. XI]
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4