I’m still a big fan of Ruby on Rails. No other framework has ever made me as productive. And it is no a secret that it makes quite some other product companies very successful. Think of Shopify, Github, Basecamp, Hey, and others.
But if you’d look at at the list of most popular languages, the top 10 doesn’t feature ruby anymore.
In their 2020 survey on most popular technologies, StackOverflow writes:
Additionally, Ruby, once in the top 10 of this list as recently as 2017, has declined, being surpassed by newer, trendier technologies such as Go and Kotlin.
Also if you look at Google trends, ruby has always been negligible when compared to Python or PHP or Javascript, the trend is downward for the ruby package manager. But that is in the generic programming languages domain, still the trends is also downwards for “Ruby on Rails” when compared to e.g. Django, Laravel & Symfony.
But perhaps people are just working hard to ship things?
Most of the above mentioned trends focussed on generic applications. According to w3techs, Ruby is the third language detected for server-side programming languages (and slowly growing, albeit currently just at a mere 4.9%, in a market that is still dominated by PHP (79.1%)).
Previously we looked at search popularity of frameworks in server-side programming languages. But another metric is github activity for these open source frameworks. At this moment (over a timespan of one month):
Rails (ruby) | Hanami (ruby) | Django (python) | Flask (python) | Symfony (php) | Laravel (php) | React (Javascript) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Merged pull request | 167 | 5 | 71 | 16 | 208 | 4 | 52 |
Open Pull requests. | 62 | 2 | 21 | 7 | 41 | 0 | 20 |
Closed issues | 90 | 1 | n/a | 17 | 158 | n/a | 69 |
New issues | 33 | 0 | n/a | 5 | 75 | n/a | 45 |
Authors | 82 | 3 | 45 | 8 | 64 | 4 | 12 |
Mergers | 77 | 3 | 35 | 7 | 65 | 3 | 9 |
Additions | 5823 | 876 | 3413 | 84 | 533,817 | 19 | 8230 |
Deletions | 1754 | 846 | 1629 | 56 | 434,091 | 3 | 4034 |
Github Stars | 48.7k | 5.5k | 58.5k | 56k | 25.6k | 65.9k | 171k |
Note: Django nor Laravel use Github for issue tracking.
Depending on the metric either Symfony or Rails take the lead (and while Laravel seemed more popular in Google Trends when compared to Symfony, it is hardly so given the Github activity).
Main consideration for me to choose Ruby on Rails over any other solution most of the time: no other framework or language has made me as productive as Ruby on Rails has (for basic web applications). And every time when I tried switching eco-systems I was struck by how much setup and configuration is required for stuff I have taken for granted to be just there and/or just work (testing infrastructure (from unit to integration), configuration of environments, dependency management).
Thanks to Petrik de Heus for suggesting the Github metrics.
update: in case you’re wondering, the ruby language itself is also quite alive (again all last month statistics):
Ruby | Rust | Python | |
---|---|---|---|
Merged pull request | 54 | 436 | 376 |
Open Pull requests. | 31 | 165 | 94 |
Closed issues | n/a | 303 | n/a |
New issues | n/a | 195 | n/a |
Authors | 38 | 141 | 77 |
Mergers | 18 | 136 | 68 |
Additions | 78,998 | 32,836 | 17,564 |
Deletions | 11,151 | 16,804 | 11,994 |
Github Stars | 18.3k | 56.8k | 39k |
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Dit artikel van murblog van Maarten Brouwers (murb) is in licentie gegeven volgens een Creative Commons Naamsvermelding 3.0 Nederland licentie .