Could Python supplant Java?

Tim Tyler tim at tt1.org
Wed Aug 21 18:40:28 EDT 2002


In comp.lang.java.advocacy Peter Hansen <peter at engcorp.com> wrote:
: Tim Tyler wrote:
:> In comp.lang.java.advocacy Gerhard Häring <gerhard.haering at opus-gmbh.net> wrote:
:> : In article <1fh7m46.1rm1rwrubs0naN%ftl at pobox.com>, Peter Perlsø wrote:

:> :> Java has 10 years of evolution, marketing and buzzworkign behind it.
:> 
:> : Less than 10 years. Java emerged in 1996, if I'm not mistaken. And it
:> : matured only a few years ago.
:> 
:> Not according to: http://www.ils.unc.edu/blaze/java/javahist.html
:> 
:> That traces Java's roots to January 15, 1991.

: And likewise, Python's roots go back well *before* 1991.  That year,
: however, was when it was first *publicly* released, which roughly
: corresponds to something like 1996 for Java.

: And this part of the discussion is pointless, because now somebody
: will point out Gosling's past with some _other_ language which thus
: "proves Java has it's roots in 1982" or something.  :)

: Let's just go with the *public* release, as it's a clear point in
: time at which the developers had enough confidence in their respective
: languages to make them publicly available.  We can't read their minds
: about when they really started thinking about it, and we can't easily
: distinguish between work on one language, and the language that came
: before it.

Java's launch was in 1995.  I'd say Java rather clearly has over 11 years
of "evolution" behind it - but maybe only 7 years of "marketing and buzz".
-- 
__________
 |im |yler  http://timtyler.org/  tim at tt1.org



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