Please stop writing and disseminating "most #popular#programming#languages" articles. Besides the fact that #popularity is a relatively useless criterion to select an implementation by [1], the sources of your data are all terrible, and generally fall into:
-questionnaires sent to #CTOs by #management sites
-undocumented analysis of some large but random #corpus of #code
-#survey questions given to users of some popular tool or website
Every single one of those suffers from severe self-selection biases - and even if a representative sample could be correctly taken, they're not actually closely related to how programming languages are matched to various problems.
It's lazy, click-baity #journalism at best, and #listicle fodder in actual fact most of the time.
[1] #CTOs may like to pick "popular" languages so they have more programmers to pick from, lowering what they need to #pay. See "Java", 1998-2015.
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