[nycphp-talk] ColdFusion vs PHP (Ruby, Perl....)
anthony wlodarski
anthony at thrillist.com
Thu May 1 16:20:49 EDT 2008
Would this work for quantifying PHP usage:
http://www.php.net/usage.php
Now find that CF usage link and compare the two.
-Anthony
Webmaster wrote:
> Kristina Anderson wrote:
>> Ed, I agree, it would be great if we could find some methodology that
>> could prove beyond a shadow of a doubt on an empirical basis that PHP
>> is a more popular platform than Cold Fusion. I can't adequately
>> defend my contention to your exacting standards at the present moment,
>> because you're right, I don't have the data. But I believe that the
>> data is gatherable and that my theory is valid.
> I do too. But I would like it quantified as well.
>> So anyone have any ideas how to do that, links, information, empirical
>> studies, etc. etc & etc ... bring 'em on.
>>
>> We could do an empirical analysis of job postings on 10 or so general
>> tech job boards over a time period of a year...?
>>
> That sounds interesting.
>> PS Ed, your own link to the TIOBE website showed that they listed Cold
>> Fusion at the bottom of the popularity grid...and PHP was in the top
>> half. But you're saying that you have "problems with their
>> methodology", OK. But you can have problems with any methodology or
>> means of proof, and that in and of itself is an emotional
>> response...based on your beliefs and temperament...and btw there's
>> nothing wrong with that! :=]
>>
>>
> I believe this to be a straw man.
> I never said I had "problems with their methodology". I said "which i
> think are erroneous", and logically so.
> I posted a link to the 2 illogical assumptions that support the TIOBE
> indexes as being fallacious.
> I will clearly list them here, as it seems you didn't follow that link
> (poor scholarship):
> # that the number of search engine hits for the phrase “/foo/
> programming” is proportional to the “popularity” of that language.
> # that the proportionality /is the same for different languages/.
> It is therefore logically unsound to deduce that the TIOBE indexes are
> correct in a truly accurate esteem.
> All they are graphing reduces to search engine results, and nothing more.
>
>> I mean let's face it, people have "proved beyond doubt" all sorts of
>> things which flat out ain't so, right?
>>
>> -- Kristina
>>
> I'm not sure what you are looking to express with that (perhaps
> rhetorical?) question.
>
> <X>Out of curiosity<X>
> <XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX>
> What would be an example of something "proved beyond doubt" that "flat
> out ain't so"?
> (Please refrain from listing some historic event of ignorance, such as
> meat becoming maggots or the Earth being flat. We are discussing a
> comparison of actual market holding betwixt two modern programming
> languages. Feel free to respond off list.)
> <XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX>
>
> In fact, there is not a clearly quantified amount of conclusive
> information to accurately deduce that PHP (or any other language) holds
> this or that particular portion of the 'market'. Therefore, to propose
> we find a 'reason' for PHP holding the majority of the 'market share',
> is pure nonsense, as we do not know that PHP holds such a portion. We
> may as well propose to find a reason for which Coldfusion holds the
> largest share of the market, or Python, or Flex, or Java, or COBOL...
>
> Perhaps this thread may be a catalyst to develop a better means of
> accurately surveying language utilization in a granular fashion.
>
> -Ed
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--
Anthony Wlodarski
PHP/MySQL Developer
www.thrillist.com
560 Broadway, Suite 308
New York, NY 10012
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f 646.557.0803
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