Re: Delphi book sales in 2007
- From: "Alexandre Machado" <alexandre@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 21:44:53 -0300
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2008/03/state-of-the-computer-book-mar-23.html
In that site I found a link to another site http://www.langpop.com/
Funny to see that the normalized chart consider Pascal and Delphi distinct
languages. IMO, Delphi is an extension of Pascal once every single line of
Pascal code I've written in college still compiles within Delphi, except
those low level routines (the OS don't let me do it anymore, not the
language itself).
What about VB? VB is a single language? VB6 and VB.NET are the same? Basic
and Visual Basic are the same language? hehehehe
SQL? SQL is a single language? Which SQL? T-SQL, PL-SQL? ANSI SQL?
I've done a little research between my colleagues here about some *super
duper* languages like Erlang, Haskell and Lua. None have ever seen a single
line of code written in those languages in a *production environment*, and
some of them are working inside some top-5 brazilian banks. So how can
Erlang and Haskell be above Delphi/Pascal in that chart?
Regards.
.
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