Zloth
I smell a... wumpus!?
Opti what? Well, "opti" - so I guess this has something to do with computer cameras?
Didn't know that about .Net Core. I knew that you can develop for linux using VS, but I assumed that only applied to console applications. And you still have to do the programming in Windows....
C# is not only quite fast now, if you want to do new things you should use .NET core, which means everything will run on linux and/or windows.
...
Didn't know that about .Net Core. I knew that you can develop for linux using VS, but I assumed that only applied to console applications. And you still have to do the programming in Windows.
pibbuR who will appreciate being corrected if he's (not unlikely) wrong.
Maybe part of the answer is what they meant by "popular", it's vague. There's not much information on the population they surveyed either: The TIOBE Programming Community index is an indicator of the popularity of programming languages. The index is updated once a month. The ratings are based on the number of skilled engineers world-wide, courses and third party vendors. Popular search engines such as Google, Bing, Yahoo!, Wikipedia, Amazon, YouTube and Baidu are used to calculate the ratings. It is important to note that the TIOBE index is not about the best programming language or the language in which most lines of code have been written. - I wouldn't trust that.A couple of things puzzles me:
And one more question: Is Sql really a programming languag? Oracle PL/SQL is, so is MS TransactSql. But Sql in itself?
- C at number 2. more polpular than C++ and C#
- Visual Basic at number 6
- Assembly language at number 8.
- Several programming languages which I thought would be included are mssing, such as Kotlin, Ruby, Javascript…
...
....
That software could be interesting to organise a scrapbook of scripts and pieces of code, it looks like it can handle highlighting of a multitude of languages with CodeMirror.Good stuff.
Bit off-topic, but after collecting this stuff, I use an open-source Bookstack server to organise things into electronic scrapbooks. It's technically a wiki, but I don't really think of it like that; it has a paradigm of organising things into shelves, books, chapters and headings, and to me it's just a great way to organise pretty much anything I want to write down. I've used other software over the years that had more functionality, but I've found the clean simplicity of this system works best, for me.
When I find interesting new images, I'll add them to a notebook with perhaps a couple of ideas. I find the bookcase metaphor just helps me organise things in context, which makes it more likely that go back and get some value from past ideas. (And also for website bookmarks - a pile of a thousand bookmarks is of almost no value, but when I put the links in context, I'll actually go back and use them.)
No travesty like Visual Basic there, thankfully; not in the top 20 anyway, it's lower than that (probably people who have to suffer it in Excel for scripts in small companies).
I'm still running big VB6 monoliths for my company, running like a charm on Windows Server 2019 / Citrix. The VB6 runtime is included in every Windows installation. (Every other needed .dll or .ocx file kann be included in the same directory as the .exe file via an additional .manifest file)
VB6 in the hands of a good programmer, still runs circles around every C# or C++ programmer regarding development time and is very friendly for agile development.
For me it is the last real RAD-platform. Delphi is still there, but bloated up a bit.
I just use MS Notes. It uses the same notion of books, chapters and pages, but names them differently. I also don't need a separate server and it is synced on all my devices automatically. I don't use the storage space for anything else, so the free version has more than enough room for notekeeping.