recodehive / Stackoverflow-Analysis

Stack overflow is a professional community for developers. This repo analysis 3 years of developer Survey done by Stackoverflow and do visualization and predict the salary of Data Scientist in future.
https://stackoverflow-analysis.streamlit.app/
MIT License
230 stars 127 forks source link

[Feature Request]: Programming Language Popularity Analysis #405

Closed deepanshubaghel closed 2 weeks ago

deepanshubaghel commented 1 month ago

Is there an existing issue for this?

Feature Description

This project involves analyzing the popularity trends of various programming languages over time and predicting future popularity. The dataset tracks the usage percentage of different programming languages across years or months. The main goals are to visualize the historical trends, examine correlations between languages, and build a predictive model for forecasting future popularity.

Use Case

This project helps developers, companies, and educational institutions analyze and predict programming language popularity trends. It enables users to visualize past trends, explore correlations, and forecast future usage, guiding decisions on learning, tech stack adoption, and curriculum updates.

Benefits

No response

Priority

High

Record

github-actions[bot] commented 1 month ago

Thank you for creating this issue! 🎉 We'll look into it as soon as possible. In the meantime, please make sure to provide all the necessary details and context. If you have any questions or additional information, feel free to add them here. Your contributions are highly appreciated! 😊

You can also check our CONTRIBUTING.md for guidelines on contributing to this project.

github-actions[bot] commented 1 month ago

Hi there! Thanks for opening this issue. We appreciate your contribution to this open-source project. We aim to respond or assign your issue as soon as possible.

github-actions[bot] commented 2 weeks ago

This issue has been automatically closed because it has been inactive for more than 30 days. If you believe this is still relevant, feel free to reopen it or create a new one. Thank you!