November Programming Language Ranking: Can Dart Beat Objective-C?
TIOBE Programming Language Ranking in November It has been released, and the top 20 ranking has not changed much. As can be seen from the chart below, C is still in the world. It is only two months since Tiobe released the 2011 annual programming language. This award is awarded to the programming language with the highest rating growth rate in the year. Compared with C #'s+1.61% and JavaScript's+0.90%, Objective-C will become the best candidate with the current growth rate of 2.79%.
Interestingly, Objective-C had the same situation in 2009 and 2010. Objective-C was surpassed by the new language Go released by Google at that time in the last month of 2009, and was also surpassed by Python at the end of 2010. The annual programming languages for 2009 and 2010 were Go and Python, respectively. ( Beijing website production )
As expected, there is another dark horse in this year's programming language, that is, Google's Dart language. Once Dart was released last month, it jumped to No. 107 on the list. This month, it reached No. 63, which is amazing. Can Dart defeat Objective-C? Let's wait and see.
Here are the top 20 programming languages
Top 10 Programming Language Trend Chart
Here is the 21-50 programming language ranking
It must be stated that this list itself collects data from the English speaking world. Although it has some reference significance in reflecting the trend, it does not fully conform to the actual situation in China. Moreover, this sampling itself has considerable limitations. ( High end website construction )
Description
The TIOBE Programming Language Community Ranking List is an indicator of the popular trend of programming languages and is updated every month. This ranking is based on the number of experienced programmers, courses and third-party manufacturers on the Internet. Ranking is calculated using well-known search engines (such as Google, MSN, Yahoo), Wikipedia and YouTube. Please note that this ranking only reflects the popularity of a programming language, not the quality of a programming language or the number of codes written by a language.