S
S
sivabur2015-10-05 15:07:00
Java
sivabur, 2015-10-05 15:07:00

What is the share of languages ​​in BakcEnd Web Enterprise by the number of projects?

Didn't googling anything.
Interested in approximate numbers.
The question was asked in order to find out the prospects of deepening into one or another Web Enterprise technology. Not for the purpose of holivar.

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

4 answer(s)
A
Aram Aramyan, 2015-10-05
@sivabur

A few years ago, Java was very much in the enterprise segment. But now Microsoft has done everything to make .NET at least as good.
If the choice is between Java and .NET, then I definitely recommend .NET, because. at the moment it is developing much faster, has excellent support and documentation, a free high-quality development environment, and the prospects for real cross-platform. On the side of .NET marketing, ready-made solutions, the latest technologies.
In fact, both technologies can be studied. They are similar in many ways (if you take the entry level). And then it all depends on what kind of work / orders.
However, do not forget that there are other languages. For example, Python. Yes, it is slower, but very often bottlenecks are simply implemented in C and everything becomes fine.

D
Dmitry Kovalsky, 2015-10-05
@dmitryKovalskiy

I don't think it's possible to collect such statistics at all. Why would companies report on what their projects are written on. And it's not clear who to ask to get a representative sample. Where do you think to go? .NET or Java? Go Java. There is open source, no proprietary, binding to the platform and other things.

�
âš¡ Kotobotov âš¡, 2015-10-06
@angrySCV

if you are interested in perspectives, why are you looking into the past?
most of the projects are based on something like PCP because of the great legacy.
the language (+ framework) is just a tool, don't worry about which tool will be the most convenient for you, over time you will understand which one you like best, maybe several even for different cases)
at the beginning of the journey - this should not worry you.

C
cthulhudx, 2015-10-06
@cthulhudx

Both technologies live quietly together, and will live for a very long time.
The Java platform has been tested for years - there are a huge number of projects that work for 10 years and serve millions of requests a day, a wonderful ecosystem, many frameworks, a huge number of tools and utilities. ASP .NET is a good platform, convenient visual editors, you can indulge in newfangled functionality and a bunch of syntactic sugar. Nobody can tell you which is better, except yourself. Choose based on your preferences.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question