Microsoft’s C# programming language was the number one programming language of 2012, according to the PYPL PopularitY of Programming Language index.
According to the PYPL index, C# had the biggest growth in 2012, rising more than 2.3 percent, by far the biggest growth of any language over the past year, surpassing Java, PHP and C++.
Moreover, while the popular TIOBE Index looks at Objective-C as a language of the year candidate, the PYPL index goes with C#.
“The TIOBE Programming Community Index has it wrong: C# is the language of the year, not Objective-C,” said a post on the PYPL Web page. “Indeed, according to the PYPL index, C# had the biggest growth in popularity this year: +2.3 percent. Over a five-year period, Python is the language whose popularity is growing the fastest; it is already the second most popular in the US.”
Also, according to the PYPL index, Java and JavaScript are fairly stable, the growth of C# comes at the expense of C and Basic, and the growth of Python is at the expense of Perl.
In December, TIOBE reported that Objective-C was on its way to repeat as its “language of the year.” According to a statement on the TIOBE Website at the time, “There is only 1 month left before TIOBE will announce the programming language of the year 2012. Objective-C continues to rise. Other mobile phone application languages such as C, C++ and Java are rising, too, but not fast enough to compete seriously with Objective-C. In fact it seems that if you are not in the mobile phone market you are losing ground.”
At the same time in December, Xamarin announced Xamarin.Mac, a new tool that enables developers to use C# to build self-contained Mac OS X apps suitable for publication in the Mac App Store. With the release of Xamarin.Mac, it is now possible to build apps in C# for more than 2.2 billion devices worldwide, comprising 1.2 billion Windows devices and, using Xamarin, 1 billion Android, iOS, and Mac devices.
For December, Objective-C, which is commonly used to build iOS and Mac OS apps, ranked No. 3 and C# ranked No. 5 on the TIOBE Index of the most popular programming languages. C was ranked first, Java second and C++ fourth in that list. For January 2012, the PYPL index ranked Java No. 1, PHP second, C# and C++ tied for third, and the C language was next at fifth.
Meanwhile, in a 2 January blog post, Nat Friedman, CEO of Xamarin, listed several reasons why he believes C# is the best language for mobile development. “What accounts for the growth of C# in 2012?” Friedman asked. “Well, the launch of Windows 8 has probably played a role – C# remains the dominant language of third-party application development on Windows devices.” He then went on to list eight reasons why C# is good for mobile development, including its reliability, ease of adoption, fast execution and portability, among others.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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