TIOBE Programming Community Index for August 2009

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TIOBE Programming Community Index for August 2009

August Headline: Objective-C enters top 20

The TIOBE Programming Community index gives an indication of the popularity of programming languages. The index is updated once a month. The ratings are based on the number of skilled engineers world-wide, courses and third party vendors. The popular search engines Google, MSN, Yahoo!, Wikipedia and YouTube are used to calculate the ratings. Observe that the TIOBE index is not about the best programming language or the language in which most lines of code have been written.

The index can be used to check whether your programming skills are still up to date or to make a strategic decision about what programming language should be adopted when starting to build a new software system. The definition of the TIOBE index can be found here.

Position
Aug 2009Position
Aug 2008Delta in PositionProgramming LanguageRatings
Aug 2009Delta
Aug 2008Status11Java19.527%-2.04%  A22C17.220%+1.04%  A34 C++10.501%+0.44%  A45 PHP9.390%+0.04%  A53 (Visual) Basic8.486%-2.37%  A66Python4.489%-0.49%  A78 C#4.443%+0.75%  A87 Perl4.028%-0.67%  A910 JavaScript2.812%-0.08%  A109 Ruby2.490%-0.43%  A1111Delphi2.337%-0.39%  A1213 PL/SQL0.982%+0.30%  A1314 SAS0.817%+0.27%  A1427 RPG (OS/400)0.752%+0.52%  A1526 ABAP0.739%+0.51%  A1616Pascal0.675%+0.26%  A-1712 D0.662%-0.69%  B1817 Lisp/Scheme0.630%+0.25%  B1941 Objective-C0.612%+0.51%  B2025 MATLAB0.560%+0.32%  B

 

Long term trends

The long term trends for the top 10 programming languages can be found in the line diagram below.

 


Other programming languages

The complete top 50 of programming languages is listed below. This overview is published unofficially, because it could be the case that we missed a language. If you have the impression there is a programming language lacking, please notify us at tpci@tiobe.com.

PositionProgramming LanguageRatings21Lua0.485%22ActionScript0.471%23COBOL0.441%24Logo0.423%25Ada0.416%26Fortran0.400%27Scratch0.334%28FoxPro/xBase0.319%29Erlang0.310%30Transact-SQL0.294%31Scala0.262%32Prolog0.260%33Haskell0.233%34ML0.232%35PowerShell0.227%36Alice0.221%37Awk0.216%38Smalltalk0.183%39LabVIEW0.173%40Focus0.165%41Forth0.150%42J0.143%43Tcl/Tk0.134%44JavaFX Script0.129%45NXT-G0.125%46Caml/F#0.123%47CL (OS/400)0.117%48Groovy0.117%49C shell0.109%50APL0.107%

 


The Next 50 Programming Languages

The following list of languages denotes #51 to #100. Since the differences are relatively small, the programming languages are only listed (in alphabetical order).

 

  • ABC, AD, Algol, Alpha, Applescript, Beta, Boo, Bourne shell, cg, Clean, Clojure, Cobra, cT, Curl, Dylan, Eiffel, Euphoria, Factor, Falcon, Fan, Icon, IDL, Inform, Io, Lingo, MAD, Magic, Maple, Mathematica, MAX/MSP, MOO, MUMPS, Natural, Occam, Oz, PL/I, Postscript, Progress, Q, R, Revolution, REXX, S-lang, SIGNAL, SPSS, Squirrel, SuperCollider, VBScript, VHDL, XSLT

 


August Newsflash - Brought to you by Paul Jansen

  • To see the bigger picture, please find the positions of the top 10 programming languages from 4, 10 and 25 years ago in the table below.

    Programming LanguagePosition
    Aug 2009Position
    Aug 2005Position
    Aug 1999Position
    Aug 1984Java113-C2211C++33211PHP45--(Visual) Basic5654Python68--C#7719-Perl844-JavaScript9910-Ruby1025--
  • The previous winners of the "Language of the Year" award are shown below.

    YearWinner2008 C 2007 Python 2006 Ruby 2005 Java 2004 PHP 2003 C++
  • In the tables below some long term trends are listed about categories of languages. The object-oriented paradigm is still very high at 54.0%. The popularity of dynamically typed languages seems to stabilize (see trend diagram below).

    CategoryRatings Aug 2009Delta Aug 2008Object-Oriented Languages 54.0% -2.4% Procedural Languages 42.0% +1.3% Functional Languages 2.8% +0.8% Logical Languages 1.2% +0.4%

    CategoryRatings Aug 2009Delta Aug 2008Statically Typed Languages 59.8% +1.1% Dynamically Typed Languages 40.2% -1.1%

     

 


Frequently Asked Questions

  • Q: What definition of programming languages has been used?

    A: A language is considered a programming language if it is Turing complete. As a consequence, HTML and XML are not considered programming languages. This also holds for data query language SQL. SQL is not a programming language because it is, for instance, impossible to write an infinite loop in it. On the other hand, SQL extensions PL/SQL and Transact-SQL are programming languages. ASP and ASP.NET are also not programming languages because they make use of other languages such as JavaScript and VBScript or .NET compatible languages. The same is true for frameworks such as Ruby on Rails, ColdFusion, Cocoa, and technologies such as AJAX. Finally, we have also excluded assembly languages, although Turing complete, because they have a very different nature.

  • Q: How are dialects of languages grouped?

    A: Some languages are grouped together because they are very similar to each other. An example is the language entry Basic which covers Visual Basic, QBasic, Microsoft Basic, etc. VB.NET has been added as well to the Visual Basic entry because it is often referred to as Visual Basic. The ratings for a collection of languages is calculated by taking the maximum of all individual entries (not its sum!).

  • Q: Am I allowed to show the TIOBE index in my weblog/presentation/publication?

    A: This is OK provided that you refer to its original source: www.tiobe.com.

  • Q: I would like to have the complete data set of the TIOBE index. Is this possible?

    A: We spent a lot of effort to obtain all the data and keep the TIOBE index up to date. In order to compensate a bit for this, we ask a fee of 1,500 US$ for the complete data set. This might seem a lot of money but it is considered strategic data. The data set runs from June 2001 till today. It started with 25 languages back in 2001, and now measures more than 150 languages at least 10 times per month. The data are availabe in comma separated format. Part of the deal is that new data will be send to you for 1 extra year. Please contact sales@tiobe.com for more information.

  • Q: What happened to Java in April 2004? Did you change your methodology?

    A: No, we did not change our methodology at that time. Google changed its methodology. They performed a general sweep action to get rid of all kinds of web sites that had been pushed up. As a consequence, there was a huge drop for languages such as Java and C++. In order to minimize such fluctuations in the future, we added two more search engines (MSN and Yahoo) a few months after this incident.

  • Q: Why is YouTube used as a search engine for the TIOBE index?

    A: First of all, YouTube counts only for 7% of all ratings, so it has hardly any influence on the index. YouTube has been added as an experiment. It qualified for the TIOBE index because of its high ranking on Alexa. YouTube is a young platform (so an indicator for popularity) and there are quite some lectures, presentations, programming tips and language introductions available on YouTube.

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