If you ask, which of the most popular programming languages is now? I can only honestly answer: specific analysis of the situation. Because I don't know, do you want to find a job in a popular mobile app startup, or just go with the crowd and write code or create an electronic art project yourself?! Language is a tool, a honey of the arsenic, for this field is necessary, but another area is dispensable. This is the second year in a row, and the IEEE spectrum and computer journalist Nick Diakopoulos hand out the popularity charts of programming languages.
This ranking system is obtained by weighting and combining 12 indicators from 10 data sources. And these sources are trustworthy-such as the IEEE Xplore Digital Library, GitHub, and CareerBuilder. The weights of these sources are adjusted by the interactive web app given, as well as the relevant job ads. Filters are also used so that you see just the language of the relevant mobile or embedded development. (US $0.99 for Web App access.) )
For convenience, we put some of the preset weights into the application: The default is the IEEE Spectrum ranking-it chooses some weights that represent the interests of most people, and here are the top 10 languages that come out of the weight this year. (The Spectrum ranking on the left is the 2015 ranking; the right is the 2014 ranking.) )
The first 5 bits are Java, C, C + +, Python and c#--, and last year ranked the same, while C was second, but increasingly close to Java. The biggest change is R, a statistical computer language that makes it easy to analyze and visualize big data, ranked in sixth place. Last year, R was only Nineth, a phenomenon that reflected the growing importance of big data in various fields. With Go,perl and even assembly ranking up, many languages have fallen sharply.
Some language rankings have fallen out of the rankings. Most of it is because there is no data this year to justify the need for a ranking. But the other thing is, it's all out of the way, for example, we now agree that the programming language in last year's rankings is classified as language rather than a framework is a mistake. We're talking about ASP, even though we originally defined the programming language as being included.
Many languages are the first to enter the rankings. Swift, Apple's new language, despite being released for 13 months, has attracted enough attention and favor. Cuda is another interesting language that has just been included--a language created by the graphics chip company Nvidia, designed for use with the company's powerful and specialized graphics processor for universal computing, and applied to many desktop and mobile devices. A total of seven languages appear first in the leaderboard.
Link:http://www.codeceo.com/article/2015-10-programming-language.html
English Original: Feature Computingsoftware the Top Ten programming Languages
translation Code Agricultural Network -Xiao Feng
The 10 most popular programming languages of the 2015