![]() ![]() While in fifth place in most-wanted languages, Mozilla-founded Rust (86.98%) keeps its crown as the most-loved language for the sixth consecutive year. Impressively, Python has retained its spot as the most-wanted language for the fifth year. STACK OVERFLOW JOBS PROFESSIONALPython (48.24%) traded places with SQL (47.08%) for third-place when including all respondents but remained in fourth-place when accounting for just professional developers. Second place goes to HTML/CSS (56.07%), showing that web development continues to dominate. Given more time, it wouldn’t be surprising to see it accelerate into the most popular web frameworks.īoth professional developers and all respondents report JavaScript (64.96%) as being, by a healthy margin, their most-used language. ![]() Our own “most impressive” award has to go to the shiny new web framework Svelte that manages to feature highly in the most-wanted, most-loved, and highest-paid lists. Unfortunately, none of these take the highest spot which goes to Ruby on Rails ($77,556). Three of the most-loved web frameworks also appear in the top five highest-paid: Svelte, ASP.NET Core, and React.js. FastAPI (70.04%) is second on the podium, followed by most-wanted framework React.js (69.28%), Vue.js (64.41%), and Express (62.07%). React.js (25.12%) also leads the most-wanted web frameworks, followed by Vue.js (16.69%), Django (9.21%), Angular (8.47%), and Svelte (6.57%).Īlthough it just makes the top five most-wanted, Svelte (71.47%) is tied with ASP.NET Core as the most-loved web framework. One of the highlights from this year’s report is that React.js (40.14%) has overtaken jQuery (34.42%) to become the most-used web framework. The pandemic continues to exert a strong influence on the shape of our economy and society, so we tried to keep this year’s survey shorter and focused on things outside the traditional office.” We opened our 2020 survey in February, and by the time we got around to publishing the results, the reality of work and daily life had shifted dramatically for people around the globe. “This year’s survey was a little different than ones in years past. ![]() In a blog post, Stack Overflow’s Ben Popper and David Gibson wrote: The 2021 edition of Stack Overflow’s developer survey features both substantial changes in the landscape while other elements have remained stubbornly resilient. ![]()
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