[ Last post on this subject from me - further discussion here, for
those who are interested: http://groups.google.com/group/langpop/ ]

On Wed, Jan 28, 2009 at 6:53 PM, Jon Harrop <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Wednesday 28 January 2009 09:48:09 David Welton wrote:
>> > There's also http://langpop.com/ which is very up-front about its
>> > methodology -Tim
>>
>> Yeah, that's mine, thanks for mentioning it!
>
> Can you add F#, Scala and Clojure, please?

They are probably a bit new/unestablished to do much more than cluster
around the bottom of the chart.  However, I'm considering the idea of
an "up and coming" chart where people could track languages like
those.

Someone else writes:

> hmm... what constraints has a language to fulfill to get on your page...
> because Groovy is not on it ;) it is in the TIOBE top 50

It should solidly register on all the metrics used.  "Up and comers"
often don't have anything on Freshmeat, Google code, Craigslist, and
maybe only have a book or two, if that.

-- 
David N. Welton

http://www.welton.it/davidw/

http://www.dedasys.com/

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