On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 12:07 AM, Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Doing it as a percentage is kind of odd; it demonstrates that using > version control is decreasing in popularity as more and more people who > don't use version control submit votes. All of the version control systems > show an upward trend in number of users, but most of them are not growing > as much as the market is shrinking. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to > be a way to get the people who use each of them as a percentage of people > who use any of them, which is what you want for "market share". Ah, you are right, I didn't analyse the graph enough, I thought percent would show what you described above, obviously it doesn't though as the values don't add up to 100%. Even so, I think this is a better graph: http://tinyurl.com/4hu2cn Since it shows users that regularly use the package, instead of user that have it installed. Considering that these days distro's have a lot of stuff pre-installed if you go with the "coders packages" the usage votes give a better picture than looking at who has it installed (which includes people that don't use the package at all). That graph shows that in the end of 2006 SVN became more popular than CVS, whereas the one from Teemu (http://tinyurl.com/4vpqzg) does not show that, probalby because a lot of people have it installed, but don't use it. It would be interesting if we could link the grow spurts from http://tinyurl.com/4hu2cn to programming-related events, something that might have caused people to suddenly use a VCS a lot more (for example the one in CVS's line from 05-2007 till 07-2007). -- Cheers, Sverre Rabbelier -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html