Ooops
Just after sending this I relized that it is possible to narrow the search
using categories.
Using the category programming:
http://www.google.com/insights/search/?hl=en-US#cat=31q=haskellcmpt=q
http://www.google.com/insights/search/?hl=en-US#cat=31q=haskellcmpt=qit
is even possible to compare the evolution of the term against the whole
category. Both go down with time (because technical people dominate less and
less the wen searches) . But the slope of Haskell is lesser than the one
of programming.
By the way, it is possible to compare two or more search terms. Within the
category programming, monad, and type class are scarce compared with
object but the slope of the former ones are clearly up while object is
down. (press growth compared with the programing category).
What happened in the first half of 2006? monads were high there!.
An further example is lazy versus strict. Both are comparable in percentage,
but lazy is scandalously up while strict is down at the same rate.
http://www.google.com/insights/search/?hl=en-US#cat=31q=lazy%2Cstrict%2Ccmpt=q
By the way, the term tired has increasing share in the programming
category ;)
2010/8/31 Henk-Jan van Tuyl hjgt...@chello.nl
On Tue, 31 Aug 2010 13:57:42 +0200, Alberto G. Corona agocor...@gmail.com
wrote:
Entering haskell language instead of haskell the ambiguity
dissapears. Then, Jamaica no longer appears in the crude reality . The
weigth of USA is hides all other country here.
I think that a more appropriate term to look for haskell interest is
monad although it may catch some crazy philosophers too. The result is
interesting,
You can still get things like a page titled Ben Haskell - Language
Technologies Institute - Carnegie Mellon, and of course, not all pages
about the programming language contain the word language. To get proper
results you would need a good semantic search engine, but these search
engines seem to be in early research stage.
Regards,
Henk-Jan van Tuyl
--
http://Van.Tuyl.eu/
http://members.chello.nl/hjgtuyl/tourdemonad.html
--
___
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe