by Andrew C. Oliver

Really? Java developers love writing non-Java

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Oct 18, 20132 mins
Core JavaJakarta EEJava

What language do Java developers love best? Survey results may surprise you.

I asked โ€” and the people responded! Fun fact No. 1: Apparently only 28 percent of Java developers write Java full time.

My survey may not be a truly scientific poll, but I was able to grab a good sampling of folks in the Java group on Google+ along with people in my Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook networks. Many of those folks in turn retweeted and reposted, so I actually know a only few of the people who responded. Throwing out duplicates and errors didnโ€™t significantly affect the results.

How do these responses track with your experiences? Iโ€™d love to know.

What surprised me is that at 33 percent, Groovy was the top JVM language. I had expected Scala, which came in second at 20 percent, to rule the roost. Note: The numbers donโ€™t add up to 100 percent because developers could and did pick multiple languages.

Itโ€™s no surprise that Java developers spend a lot of time outside the JVM writing browser JavaScript (24 percent). I expected Ruby (7 percent) to follow this, but it trailed second-place Python (10 percent), third-place C++ (9 percent), and even nonbrowser JavaScript โ€” I mean, Node.js did better at 8 percent. The numbers once again add up to more than 100 percent due to multiple selection.

The responses confirmed my suspicion that while the JVM is action-packed, the Java language itself didnโ€™t fare as well due to the long release cycle and various delays. Oracle should take note that Java developers are spending so much time writing non-Java. This presents a great opportunity for Typesafe (the Scala company) and Pivotal (which employs some key Groovy people) to gain and monetize developer mind share, possibly at Oracleโ€™s expense.

This article, โ€œReally? Java developers love writing non-Java,โ€ was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Keep up on the latest developments in application development, and read more of Andrew Oliverโ€™s Strategic Developer blog at InfoWorld.com. For the latest business technology news, follow InfoWorld.com on Twitter.