This link has been bookmarked by 16 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Feb 2009, by someone privately.
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27 May 09
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23 Mar 09
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04 Mar 09
PankajIn the above treemap view, you'll notice a couple of bright green areas -- namely Objective-C and ActionScript. PHP and C# are dark green and show a nice growth when compared to the rest of the larger languages in the fourth quarter of 2007. Unfortunately what this does not show is a visual reference for how the size of the box changes over time. We reported last year that Ruby had grown nicely, had passed Perl and Python, and was knocking on the door for Visual Basic's spot. However, Ruby had the largest decrease in unit sales in 2008. Of the large languages, the following show a healthy growth trend in 2008: C# with 17,397 more units, PHP with 10,896 more units, ActionScript with 23,881 more units, and Python with 11,517 more units.
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02 Mar 09
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01 Mar 09
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28 Feb 09
sdagueSome fun with statistics. I think you can see some interesting buzz generation pushing some of the languages with growth. C# because of Silverlight, ActionScript because of AIR, Python because of App Engine, and Objective-C because of the iPhone.
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Robert Sutor"In this fourth post (parts one, two and three are found here) on the State of the Computer Book Market, we will look at programming languages and drill in a little on each language area."
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27 Feb 09
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26 Feb 09
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Rajan DattaGreat set of posts from O'Reilly detailing state of the Computer Book market. Part 4/5 with links to prev
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Timo TuominenIn this fourth post (parts one, two and three are found here) on the State of the Computer Book Market, we will look at programming languages and drill in a little on each language area. Overall the market for programming languages was down 5.9% in 2008 w
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