The content of this page is identical throughout Q4/2022 - October, November, and December.
| 2022 | Sep | Aug | Jul |
Here are the choices in alphabetical order:
Please note:
Picking a popular technology makes our developer life easier: Easier to learn, easier to build, debug & deploy, easier to find jobs/hire, and easier to convince teammates & bosses. Now popularity can make a difference in two situations: When multiple technologies score similarly, we could go for the most popular one. And when a technology is very unpopular, we may not use it.
I measure popularity among employers and developers as the trend between competing technologies. I count mentions in job ads at Indeed for employer popularity. For developer popularity, I use Google searches, Udemy course buyers, and Stack Overflow questions.
The Indeed job search is active in 62 countries representing 89% of the worldwide GDP in 2020. It demonstrates the willingness of organizations to pay for a technology - the strongest indicator of popularity in my mind. IntelliJ is the baseline.
Eclipse wins, IntelliJ is second, VS Code is third, and NetBeans last. Eclipse has declined over the last three months but still leads IntelliJ 2.3:1. Its numbers may be a bit too high, as Eclipse also has many frameworks, and the search only checks for “Eclipse”, not “Eclipse IDE”. VS Code dropped heavily in the last month. NetBeans is an also-run.
Please see here for details, caveats, and adjustments to the job ad mentions.
You can find the detailed search results with links here. They include breakdowns by continents:
Udemy is one of the biggest online learning sites. They publish the number of people who bought a course (beyond a certain threshold, possibly around 100k). This shows how many people evaluate a technology. This time, Eclipse is the baseline.
VS Code wins, and Eclipse is second. VS Code leads Eclipse 3.1:1. Neither IntelliJ nor NetBeans has enough students for Udemy to reveal their number.
Here are the links that show the courses for all and the number of students for some:
Google Trends demonstrates the initial interest in a technology over time. “More searches = better” to me.
This link produces the chart above.
The decline of Eclipse (17 years) and NetBeans (12 years) is clearly visible, as is the rise of VS Code. Let’s zoom in on the last three years:
This link produces the chart above.
VS Code wins, Eclipse is second, IntelliJ is third, and NetBeans is fourth. VS Code just hit its all-time peak. Eclipse has spikes around its quarterly releases but is slightly down compared to three years ago, while IntelliJ is slightly up in the same time frame.
Stack Overflow Trends shows which percentage of questions at Stack Overflow has a particular technology tag. It is a proxy for using a technology during evaluation and productive use. “More questions = better” to me.
This link produces the chart above.
VS Code wins, IntelliJ is second, Eclipse is third, and NetBeans is fourth. VS Code has risen for seven years and is slightly below its all-time peak from mid-2022. Eclipse and NetBeans have declined for more than eight years, and IntelliJ for more than five years.
So here’s my recommendation: