Java is barely hanging on to its ranking as the most popular programming language, edging out C in this month's Tiobe index of programming language popularity.
Released on Sunday, the February Tiobe Community Programming Index had Java being used by 17.05 percent of developers. A year ago, 18.48 percent of developers used it, while 17.48 percent of developers used Java a month ago. C was slotted right behind Java, used by 16.52 percent of developers in the latest release of the index -- up from 14.98 percent the same time last year, but down from the 16.98 percent using it in last month's index.
[ Tiobe's previous prediction that Java could fall from the top spot has not come to fruition -- yet. | Also, see Oracle's two-year road map for Java. | Get more Java news by subscribing to InfoWorld's Enterprise Java newsletter. ]
"Java has a chance to remain number one now that Android is the most frequently used mobile platform," said Paul Jansen, Tiobe's managing director. "On the other hand, lots of small devices (and there appear to be more and more of these in this world) are still being programmed in C. I expect that Java will remain number 1 for at least the next six months."
Ranking behind Java and C were: C#, used by 8.65 percent; C++, at 7.85 percent; Objective-C, at 7.06 percent; and PHP, used by 5.64 percent. But Objective-C, which is gaining popularity because of its association with Apple iOS application development, and PHP, for server-side Web development, are going in opposite directions. While Objective-C gained nearly 4.5 percentage points in a year, having been used by just 2.57 percent of developers a year ago, PHP saw its usage drop from 6.97 percent during the same time last year to 5.64 percent in the latest survey.
Tiobe pointed out that Visual Basic.Net, the follow-up to Microsoft's legacy Visual Basic language, is gaining in popularity as Visual Basic loses steam. Visual Basic was used by 4.32 percent of developers, down from nearly 5 percent that used it a year ago, while VB.Net increased from 0.59 percent a year ago to nearly 0.80 percent. But Visual Basic is the 7th-ranked language, while VB.Net is ranked 16th. It had been ranked 22nd a year ago, though. "It might be a coincidence, but while classic (Visual) Basic is slowly going off radar, VB.Net is still gaining in popularity each month. VB.Net now enters the top 20," Tiobe said.
Jansen, however, said he did not think there was a correlation between the decline of Visual Basic and the rise of VB.Net. "Visual Basic has no major vendor (except for a couple of smaller companies) anymore, so it will slowly die. VB.Net is not really promoted by Microsoft; it is way behind C# and C++. Even F# sometimes gets more attention of Microsoft than VB.Net. So I don't expect VB.Net to rise any further."
Tiobe rankings are based on the number of skilled engineers worldwide and third-party vendors using a particular language, with rankings determined by assessments of search engine results in Google, Bing, and Yahoo along with other sites, including Wikipedia, Amazon, YouTube, and Baidu. The index, Tiobe said, is not about the number of lines of code written or about the best programming languages.
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