Thought some of you real computer guys would like to see this.

Swift from Apple was introduced to the programmer world in June 2014…In less 
than two years look at the position of Swift in the programming world….

John



Programmers love Apple, dread Microsoft, and think Facebook is trendy




Apple CEO Tim Cook 

Today, the tremendously popular online programmer hangout Stack Overflow 
<http://www.stackoverflow.com/> released its 2016 developer survey results 
<http://stackoverflow.com/research/developer-survey-2016#overview>, the 
absolute best look into the state of the software industry you can find 
anywhere.

With 56,033 coders in 173 countries responding to the survey — more than double 
last year's base — the Stack Overflow survey covers every conceivable topic, 
from trendy technologies to demographics.

Here are some key results: 

Apple's hot Swift programming language 
<http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-swift-gives-ibm-a-leg-up-in-cloud-2016-2> 
took second place in the "Most Loved" category, with 72.1% of all developers 
saying they use it and want to keep using it. It finished just behind Rust, a 
popular language that spun out of Mozilla, with 79.1%.

Microsoft's Visual Basic programming language topped the "Most Dreaded" charts, 
with 79.5% of developers saying that they're working with the technology, but 
would prefer not to do so in the future.

15.8% of developers say that they don't work with Android, but they'd like to, 
making it the "Most Wanted" tech skill out there.
Facebook's React technology 
<http://www.businessinsider.com/why-facebook-does-open-source-2015-3>, which 
helps developers build apps with slick front-end interfaces, is the 
top-trending technology on the Stack Overflow developer Q&A site. Meanwhile, 
Microsoft Windows Phone 
<http://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-windows-10-mobile-upgrades-begin-2016-3>
 saw a massive 65.2% drop in posts, making it the biggest loser.

The 20-year-old JavaScript language still rules the roost: 55.4% of all 
developers program with it, with the SQL database language in second place with 
49.1% and Java with 36.3%.

Beyond just technology, the Stack Overflow developer survey also reveals the 
makeup of the programmers who work in the industry.
For instance, according to the study, the average developer is 29.6 years old, 
with a median age of 27. That number actually varies by country, with the 
average American programmer being 32 years old. 

Oh, and because you were probably wondering: Women made up only 5.8% of the 
56,033 respondents. Of those women coders, the most popular job title was 
"designer." The least common job title for women developers was "executive," as 
in CIO or CTO. 



Swift ascends the programming language ranks

Last summer, about 6 weeks after Apple introduced Swift, a new programming 
language designed to ultimately replace Objective-C as the language for iOS and 
OS X development, I wrote about how developers appeared to be quickly adopting 
Swift 
<http://www.itworld.com/article/2832689/github-data-shows-developers-are-turning-to-swift.html>-
 or, at least, taking it for a serious spin. Now, more than 6 months after its 
release, comes more evidence from a number of sources that the interest in and 
use of Swift has continued to grow. Correspondingly, use of Objective-C has 
appeared to slow down and even begin to regress.

First off, the Popularity of Programming Languages Index (PYPL) named Swift its 
Programming Language of the Year for 2014 <http://pypl.github.io/PYPL.html>. 
The PYPL index is based on web searches for tutorials about programming 
languages. In 2014, Swift saw the largest increase among all languages in its 
share of such searches, 2.9%. Swift is currently ranked #12 on PYPL with an 
overall share of 2.5%. Objective-C, on the other hand, while still ranked 
higher at #8 (the same spot it held one year ago 
<https://web.archive.org/web/20140217174728/https://sites.google.com/site/pydatalog/pypl/PyPL-PopularitY-of-Programming-Language>)
 with a 6.1% share, is trending slightly downwards, with its share dropping by 
0.2% in the past year.

Next, as I noted last week 
<http://www.itworld.com/article/2868413/javascript-is-the-one-programming-language-to-learn-if-you-can-learn-only-one.html>,
 the TIOBE Index of programming languages named JavaScript its Programming 
Language of 2014, but only after noting that Swift (along with R) looked like 
it was going to grab that title, before losing out to an end-of-year surge in 
interest in JavaScript.


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