Showing posts with label JavaScript. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JavaScript. Show all posts

Sunday, December 31, 2017

Significant Software Development Developments of 2017

This post is my personal and opinionated assessment of some of the most significant developments related to software development in 2017. This is my eleventh year for this annual post and my previous years' assessment are available for 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008, and 2007. As with these previous years' assessments, this assessment of 2017's major developments in software development are obviously biased, opinionated, and limited to my perspective.

I think it important to re-emphasize that although this is an opinion-heavy post, the opinions are not on whether a particular language, framework, or tool is "best" or "worst." Rather, the opinions come in when deciding which of these frameworks, languages, or tools had the biggest developments of the year. I could, for example, decide that some language I hated had a big year and talk about its significant accomplishments of the year even if I loathe the language. Last year, at least one reader confused my listing of languages as endorsement of that being a better language, but this post is not that at all. Instead, this is a post of significant developments during 2017 in the software development world that I'm aware of. I obviously cannot be aware of every major software development happening in 2017 and welcome any feedback about major developments of 2017 in the world of software development.

One of the many challenges of writing a post such as this is that many of the subjects overlap significantly and it can be difficult to separate them and distinguish them. For example, the Internet of Things (IoT), Edge Computing, Cloud Computing, Big Data, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Software Security are all closely related and overlap to a degree.

10. Kotlin

2017 was a significant year for Kotlin. Kotlin 1.1 was released and moved JavaScript support out of "experimental." The release notes state that this JavaScript support "supports all Kotlin language features, a large part of the standard library, as well as JavaScript interoperability." The Kotlin 1.1 release also introduced (experimental) coroutines.

Kotlin 1.2 was also released in 2017 and built on the JavaScript support added by Kotlin 1.1 to add "the possibility to reuse code between the JVM and JavaScript."

The Technology Preview of Kotlin/Native was announced in 2017. The kotlin-native GitHub page describes Kotlin/Native as "an LLVM backend for the Kotlin compiler, runtime implementation, and native code generation facility using the LLVM toolchain" that is "primarily designed to allow compilation for platforms where virtual machines are not desirable or possible (such as iOS or embedded targets), or where a developer is willing to produce a reasonably-sized self-contained program without the need to ship an additional execution runtime."

Perhaps the biggest news for Kotlin in 2017 was its adoption as an officially supported program language for developing Android applications. The Kotlin Blog post "Kotlin on Android. Now official" opens with, "Today, at the Google I/O keynote, the Android team announced first-class support for Kotlin." The Kotlin on Android FAQ states that "Kotlin is fully supported in Android Studio 3.0 and higher." The 2017 4th Quarter Realm Report predicts that "2018 will be the year of Kotlin" and and that Kotlin will overtake Java as primary Android development language by December 2018.

Spring Framework 5 support for Kotlin was also announced in 2017. Wired features an article this year titled "Kotlin: the Upstart Coding Language Conquering Silicon Valley" and the Heroku Blog features a post "On the Rise of Kotlin". There are now multiple books available on Kotlin, most with publication dates in 2017. The Tiobe Index's December 2017 edition states, "The programming languages Kotlin and C seem to be the only candidates to become programming language of the year 2017" (Tiobe's programming language of the year is the "programming language that has the highest rise in ratings in a year"). Gabriela Motroc has published five proofs of "why Kotlin deserves to become the programming language of the year."

9. React

The main page for React.js describes it as "A JavaScript library for building user interfaces." This succinct description is perhaps a bit understated. React has received plenty of praise online this year and his been proclaimed by several blog post and article authors as the most popular choice for building front ends. The post "React.JS Top 10 Articles of The Year (v.2017)" highlights ten posts on React selected from nearly 12 thousand posts published in 2017. Similarly, the post "The most popular React links of 2017" highlights "the most popular links shared in 2017" from the year's editions of the React Status newsletter.

The popularity of React is proven by the influence the library has on general JavaScript development. For example, React's JSX that appears to mix JavaScript and HTML (it's really JavaScript with a HTML-like syntactic facade or "syntactic sugar") appears to be changing some opinions regarding the seeming mixing of JavaScript and HTML and there is now discussion about the differences between "separation of concerns" and "separation of technologies." In "JSX Looks Like An Abomination, But it's Good for You," Eric Elliott writes, "JSX is like a healthy vegetable that tastes like decadent chocolate cake. You feel guilty, but it's good for you."

8. Low-Code/No-Code

I've been a professional software developer long enough now to have seen many trends come and go, come again and go again. Throughout this time, there has been a seemingly constant effort to reduce the amount of code that needs to be written and maintained. We have come along way in many respects, but there is still a lot of custom code that is hand-written and much of it is redundant. Recently (and especially in 2017), the terms "low-code", "no-code", and "citizen developer" have become popular in this constant search for software development's holy grail.

Edward Hadley's "Low-Code Development Platforms Address Soaring Application Needs" explains the renewed recent interest in low-code and no-code solutions. He writes, "While the demand for custom applications has never been higher, traditional development approaches simply can’t keep pace. According to a statistic cited by Gartner, through 2021, market demand for app development will grow at least five times faster than IT capacity to deliver it." He adds, "The inherent value of a low-code development platform is that it brings IT and the business together." Jonathan Hult maintains a collection of "Low-code app builders" that "serve as a roundup post linking to low-code (or no-code) app (web/desktop) builders" and "should be citizen developer friendly."

It is postulated in The Atlantic article "The Coming Software Apocalypse" looks at the advantages of no-code/low-code/citizen developers from a different perspective. A central premise of this article is that many of the current and impending problems associated with software are due to general programmers not understanding well enough the problems they are trying to solve with code. Developers must focus on the instructions to the machine via code more than on the problem being solved. Nancy Leveson is quoted as saying, "The problem is that software engineers don't understand the problem they're trying to solve, and don't care to." She adds that the real problem is not being able to cover all the necessary requirements to be coded to in a manageable way. Bret Victor is quoted as saying, "I'm not sure that programming has to exist at all. Or at least software developers." He maintains that tools should be created to remove the need to work directly with code to solve the problems.

A paper by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory has a title starting with "Will humans even write code in 2040...?" starts its opening "Abstract" section with this statement, "Programming trends suggest that software development will undergo a radical change in the future: the combination of machine learning, artificial intelligence, natural language processing, and code generation technologies will improve in such a way that machines, instead of humans, will write most of their own code by 2040." One of the paper's authors (Jay Jay Billings) states in "Good code generators will be the most helpful and useful tools for coding by 2040" that he believes that "humans will still write code in 2040," but that "most code that we write now - what we might consider 'everyday code' - will be written with code generators that are fed by machine learning, AI, and natural language processing."

7. Blockchain

Primarily because of the mainstream interest in Bitcoin, many more people have become aware of the blockchain concept in 2017.

There are high expectations for blockchain. In "Blockchain: An Introduction," Arun Pandey writes that blockchain "helps transactions to have public witnesses and hence minimize cyber crime and fraud" and "serves as an open, distributed ledger to record transactions between two parties in a verifiable and lasting way." The article "What is Blockchain Technology? A Step-by-Step Guide For Beginners" states that "blockchain is an undeniably ingenious invention" that has "created the backbone of a new type of internet ... by allowing digital information to be distributed but not copied." Gabriela Motroc has asked "eight blockchain influencers" if "blockchain [can] transform the world?"

6. Machine Learning (ML) / Artificial Intelligence (AI) / Big Data

The authors of the Harvard Business Review July 2017 cover story "The Business of Artificial Intelligence" write, "The most important general-purpose technology of our era is artificial intelligence, particularly machine learning (ML) - that is, the machine's ability to keep improving its performance without humans having to explain exactly how to accomplish all the tasks it's given." They cover ways that AI has already helped business, but also look at unrealistic expectations for AI.

Some interesting uses of machine learning are covered in online resources such as Machine Learning for Humans, How artificial intelligence and machine learning will disrupt legal space, Machine learning will not replace people in all jobs: Study, Reimagine Business for Machine Learning, and Falling into Machine Learning.

In "2017: The Year AI Floated into the Cloud," Jackie Snow writes that in 2017 "tech firms opened a new front in the battle to win users over in the cloud: the large-scale introduction of cloud-based AI." Computer Weekly has published its "Top 10 Artificial Intelligence Stories of 2017" and Zach Emmanuel writes, "Artificial intelligence (AI) has continued to gain prominence in 2017 as one of the biggest upcoming technologies."

Big Data remains "big" in terms of popularity. Alex Woodie's post "10 Key Big Data Trends That Drove 2017" details "10 of the biggest takeaways for the big data year that was 2017." The post "Big Data: Main Developments in 2017 and Key Trends in 2018" "considers what happened in Big Data" in 2017. A DZone post details select IT Executives' responses related to their "biggest surprises about big data and analytics" in 2017. The post "Top 10 Big Data Blogs of 2017" looks at SyncSort's top ten blog posts of Big Data in 2017, including the post "Just How Big is Big Data, Anyway?" The article "The rise of big data in 2017: Here are the top emerging trends" begins with, "We saw the rise of big data in 2017 and the trend will continue to gain speed. Accessing and preserving big data is now a common practice at almost all organizations."

One of the "big" stories in the world of Big Data is the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). According to its web page, the GDPR "was designed to harmonize data privacy laws across Europe, to protect and empower all EU citizens data privacy and to reshape the way organizations across the region approach data privacy." That page states that its effective as of 25 May 2018 and "at which time those organizations in non-compliance will face heavy fines." The "key changes" of the GDPR can be found in "GDPR Key Changes." Bozhidar Bozhanov has posted "GDPR - A Practical Guide for Developers."

Since the original publication of this post, Jack Hinckley has posted "Big Data Made Big Strides in 2017". Hinckley writes in the opening paragraph, "2017 will be known as the year that Big Data went from buzzword on tech blogs and into practice at companies and organizations around the globe. ... We can now say, the time of Big Data on a large scale has arrived."

I might have "cheated" a bit to include artificial intelligence, machine learning, and Big Data all in one item, but they are closely related in many scenarios. Posts and articles talking about these together include "How Big Data Is Empowering AI and Machine Learning?", "Why AI, Machine Learning And Big Data Really Matter To B2B Companies," "Artificial intelligence, machine learning, deep learning and beyond," and "How Big Data Is Empowering AI and Machine Learning at Scale."

5. Containers

Containers continued to be a popular topic in 2017.

The Docker Blog has collected its Top Five Blogs of 2017 that include the posts Build and Run Your First Docker Windows Server Container and Exciting new things for Docker with Windows Server 1709. That blog also features a post Top 5 Docker Customer Success Stories in 2017.

2017 was an especially big year for Kubernetes. Christopher Tozzi writes in "Kubernetes’ Big Triumph of 2017: Killing Docker" that "the biggest change of 2017 in the world of containers" is "Kubernetes’s rise to dominance." He adds, "Kubernetes has taken the container ecosystem by storm. It has basically become the new Docker, in the sense that it is the name that now dominates most conversations about container technology." The Docker page "Adding Kubernetes support in the Docker platform" discusses Kubernetes integration with Docker in greater detail.

Chris Short has written a post Docker, Inc is Dead in which he opens with the sentence, "To say that Docker had a very rough 2017 is an understatement." He adds, "People will look back on 2017 as the year Docker, a great piece of software, was completely ruined by bad business practices leading to its end in 2018."

4. DevOps

The term "DevOps" seems to be written about and talked about more than ever. Everything I wrote about DevOps in last year's post remains true but to an even (much) larger degree than last year: "Although the DevOps concept has been around for a while now, it's gained popularity with the 'suits' (management) and the term is thrown around in all types of contexts. Software product vendors emphasize how their products continue to DevOps and software development requisitions and job listings are filled with references to experience with DevOps."

In my perusal of blog post titles and headlines each day, I see numerous references to DevOps. In just this week, posts on DevOps that have crossed my screen include DevOps remains a competitive advantage, Kubernetes news, DevOps developments dominate 2017 for IT shops, and Top 10 DevOps articles of 2017: The Enterprisers Project. Two (of many) examples of DevOps being embraced by the highest levels of management is the existence of the Forbes article "10 Top DevOps Barriers And Trends Forecasted For 2018," "2017 Brought More Open Standards for DevOps," and the DZone questions and answers format "Concerns With DevOps."

DZone has published "2017 DevOps Surprises" that contains observations from "IT executives" regarding the "biggest surprises about DevOps" in 2017. Forrester called 2017 the year of DevOps and predicts 2018 to be "The Year of Enterprise DevOps." Stanislav Ivaschenko has posted "Hopes and Fails in DevOps 2017."

3. Microservices

I cannot think of a software development related term that I heard or read more about during 2017 than "microservices." The term has been used for several years now, but 2017 seemed to see more use of it than ever. The Register recently featured an article called "Microservices 101" that introduces microservices for those who may not have heard much about them yet. Vendors are pushing microservices, which always means hearing a lot about them. "The State of Microservices Survey 2017 - Eight trends you need to know" provides observations from a survey of developers using microservices.

2. Cloud Computing / Internet of Things (IoT)

Cloud computing and the Internet of Things (IoT) continue to become more pervasive in our lives as consumers and therefore, not surprisingly, as software developers.

Recent articles on cloud computing in 2017 include "The Cloud in 2017: Amazon Web Services shows no signs of slowing during the year of Kubernetes," "2017 Cloud Computing and Data Center Industry Review and Conclusion," "8 resources for understanding the open source cloud in 2017" ("2017 was a big year for open source cloud computing tools"), "Cloud computing: Getting bigger but more complicated too," "Top cloud providers dominate headlines in 2017," "2017 cloud computing headlines show upside, hurdles for CIOs," "The top 10 Thoughts on Cloud articles of 2017," "Cloud Computing - What’s The Big Deal," "10 Benefits and Advantages of Cloud Computing," and forward-looking "5 cloud computing trends for 2018".

Sierra Wireless has published a post called "Internet of Things Year in Review: 2017." Other recent articles on the Internet of Things include "The internet of things: Why it matters," "Rise of the machines: who is the ‘internet of things’ good for?," and "2017 Internet Of Things (IoT) Intelligence Update,"

There have also been recent articles with ominous tones regarding internet of things such as "The Internet of Things' Dangerous Future," "The Internet of Things Needs a Code of Ethics," "Is This a Setback for the Internet of Things?," and "The dark side of the internet of things". Securing devices connected to each other via the internet of things is going to remain (or become in some cases) a high priority.

1. Software Security and Software Outages

I'd love to not have software security issues and software outages not top my list, but 2017 seemed to see even more negative incidences related to software security and software availability than ever. Michael Novinson writes that "data breach activity continued to skyrocket in the first 11 months of 2017, with the numbers of breaches jumping to 1,202, according to a report from the Identity Theft Resource Center and CyberScout," which is "up 10 percent from the 1,093 breaches recording during the entirety of 2016." John Zorabedian writes that 2017 "featured daily news about cyberattacks, data breaches, and software vulnerabilities." He adds, "If it feels like our cybersecurity challenges grow bigger and more complex, year after year, it's more than just a perception."

Here is a list of headlines from 2017 that highlight this increased frequency.

DZone has featured two posts on "2017 Security Surprises": Part 1 and Part 2.

Honorable Mention

The following did not make my top ten, but nevertheless saw major developments in 2017. Many of these items would likely make a different developer's top ten. There is no significance implied by the order of these listed entries in the "Honorable Mention" section.

"Serverless" / Function as a Service (FaaS)

I first started paying attention to the term "serverless" when the Fn Project was announced at JavaOne 2017 and especially after reading 8 Reasons why we built the Fn Project. The Martin Fowler article "Serverless Architectures" introduces these concepts well and the InfoQ article "FaaS, PaaS, and the Benefits of the Serverless Architecture" looks at the benefits of using these and talks about "nanoservices." Matt Watson's "What Is Function-as-a-Service? Serverless Architectures Are Here!" is also a good introduction to this topic and when FaaS and "serverless" might make the most sense to use.

Edge Computing

Often closely associated with Internet of Things (IoT), edge computing is described in GE Digital's What is Edge Computing? blog article as "computing infrastructure that exists close to the sources of data ... [on] devices [that] typically reside away from the centralize computing available in the cloud." The Wikipedia entry on edge computing adds, "Edge computing pushes applications, data and computing power (services) away from centralized points to the logical extremes of a network." The previously cited GE Digital article also differentiates Edge Computing versus Fog Computing and Edge Computing versus Cloud Computing.

Quantum Computing and Microsoft Q#

The concept of quantum computing is nothing new, but Microsoft's series of announcements of its Microsoft Quantum Development Kit Preview in the fourth quarter of 2017 seem to me to be a very significant development for quantum computing in 2017 because it feels like an early step toward taking quantum computing mainstream. The Microsoft Quantum Development Kit includes Microsoft's Q# programming language (including standard library and compiler) along with a "local quantum machine simulator" and a Q#-oriented extension for Visual Studio.

A Nature.com post in early 2017 titled "Quantum computers ready to leap out of the lab in 2017" states, "Quantum computing has long seemed like one of those technologies that are 20 years away, and always will be. But 2017 could be the year that the field sheds its research-only image."

A nice introduction to quantum computing (at least as far as the little I understand about the subject allows me to detect) can be found in the aptly named "An Introduction To Quantum Computing." Microsoft has also provided an introduction in "What is quantum computing?" Forbes has published "15 Things Everyone Should Know About Quantum Computing."

An editorial in The Guardian calls the "the great power contest to develop a quantum computer" the "space race of our times." The following are some events and announcements related to quantum computing that occurred in 2017:

WebAssembly

In "Mozilla Made the Web Better for Developers in 2017," Dustin Driver writes that "by the end of 2017, all the major browsers shipped support for WebAssembly, making the web a speedier and more robust place for everyone." The article "WebAssembly Will Finally Let You Run High-Performance Applications in Your Browser" discusses the history behind WebAssembly and "Introduction to WebAssembly: why should we care?" provides a nice introduction to WebAssembly, what it is, and why it will change web development and the user experience on the web.

Reactive System / Reactive Programming

The Reactive Manifesto was published in September 2014 and the reactive design concept seems to have grown in popularity each year since, especially becoming well-known in 2016 and 2017. The Red Hat Developers Blog features a post "5 Things to Know About Reactive Programming" in which Clement Escoffier defines "reactive programming" as "a development model structured around asynchronous data streams." Escoffier emphasizes that reactive programming is not the same thing as a reactive system: "Using reactive programming does not transform your system into a Reactive System. Reactive Systems are the next level."

TypeScript

TypeScript continued to see increased adoption in 2017. Mary Branscombe's post "Why TypeScript Is Growing More Popular" explains some of the reasons for this rise in popularity. Microsoft Technical Fellow and TypeScript developer Anders Hejlsberg is quoted in this article, "There's no doubt the partnership that we have with the Angular team has helped drive the numbers. ... Lots of other frameworks are using TypeScript at this point. Aurelia, Ionic, NativeScript are all, in one way or another, involved in TypeScript. The Ember framework, the Glimmer framework that was just released is written in TypeScript."

Two other posts in 2017 commenting on the rise of TypeScript popularity are "JavaScript for squares: The incredible rise of TypeScript" and "TypeScript - a trend that keeps on trending."

TypeScript turned five in 2017 and saw several new releases in 2017 as part of its new release cadence:

Vue.js

Vue.js ("The Progressive JavaScript Framework") seems to be a JavaScript framework whose popularity is rising quickly. Kevin Peters has written an extensive post called "Vue.js review of 2017" that leaves little need for me to write more regarding Vue.js in 2017. However, an additional potentially interesting read is "This Week in Numbers: React Leads the Pack, Though Vue.js Makes Big Strides in China."

Angular

Angular 5 (pentagonal-donut) was released in 2017 and "focuses on making Angular smaller, faster, and easier to use," but not everyone is pleased. Angular 5.1 has also been released in 2017 as has beta 5.2 versions.

JAX's "Year in review: Angular in 2017" provides a more detailed month-by-month review of Angular-related news in 2017.

JavaScript

JavaScript continued to be a highly adopted and used programming language with just one evidence of that being the numerous libraries and frameworks associated with JavaScript covered in this very blog post. I won't cover individual developments in the world of JavaScript here because there are so many online resources covering similar material. One such post is "JavaScript in 2017: Year in Review, Predictions for 2018" in which Boris Cherny writes, "2017 has been a wild year for JavaScript and frontend development." The article "The most popular JavaScript links of 2017" highlights top stories in 2017 from the JavaScript Weekly newsletters. "JavaScript: Top Articles in 2017" highlights "popular JavaScript Articles and Tutorials on Codeburst in 2017."

There are numerous "state of JavaScript in 2017" type posts (several of these are interpretations or summaries of the first linked post) such as "The State of JavaScript - 2017" (see also "A Look Back at the State of JavaScript in 2017" and "I just asked 23,000 developers what they think of JavaScript. Here's what I learned."), "JavaScript developers prefer React, want to ditch Angular & are attracted to Vue.js", "State of JavaScript: TypeScript rises, Angular falls," "Brief Analysis of the State of JavaScript 2017 Results," "Angular, React and VueJS - The Rise of Client-Side Frameworks in 2017," and "Developer Ecosystem Survey 2017 - JavaScript."

Node.js

Node.js remains popular in 2017 as proven by posts such as "Node.js State of the Union 2017," "This is what Node.js is used for in 2017 - Survey Results," and "The Node.js Community was amazing in 2017!"

Node.js releases in 2017 range from Node.js 7.4.0 through Node.js 9.3.0.

Java

Mark Little of Red Hat is quoted in "Java: 2017 Surprises and 2018 Predictions", "This has been a big year for Java, with several significant developments contributing to the ongoing evolution of the technology. The most notable event in 2017 was Oracle’s announcement to more fully open up Java EE by moving it to an open source foundation - and the subsequent announcement that it had selected the Eclipse Foundation to host the initiative as a top-level project called Eclipse Enterprise for Java (EE4J)."

JDK 9 was released in 2017 with its much anticipated and long-awaited introduction of built-in platform modularity. There was a surprising amount of drama surrounding the naming of future versions of Java SE as well, but it seems that "JDK 10" has won out. Oracle has also announced changes the releases of versions of Java and differentiated between the "Oracle JDK ("commercial long term support offering" intended for "commercial and support customers") and OpenJDK (which will include access to "previously commercial features such as Java Flight Recorder").

IBM open sourcing its JVM in 2017 and it is called OpenJ9. Another big deal to the Java community in 2017 was the publication of the Third Edition of Effective Java, the first edition of this book covering very significant Java versions 7, 8, and 9. Java Code Geeks has posted "Top 10 JavaCodeGeeks posts for 2017" that presents "a compilation with the most popular posts for this year" including "JDK 9 is Feature Complete" and "JDK 9 is the End of the Road for Some Features."

See JAX's Year in Review: Java in 2017 for a detailed analysis of events in the world of Java that occurred in 2017. Ben Evans's article "Looking Forward to Java in 2018" looks briefly at 2017 for Java and then looks at what the future may hold for Java. JAX also has posted "Top 10 Java stories of 2017: Angular, Eclipse, ML, and more."

Swift

Swift 4 was released in 2017. Two resources for details on Swift 4 features are What's New in Swift 4? and What's new in Swift 4.0.

Guy Daher, a self-described "Swift developer evangelist," looks at What Stats and Surveys are saying about Swift in 2017.

Python

Python's popularity continues to increase and it's one of the most-used programming languages available. The State of the Octoverse 2017 states that "Python replaced Java as the second-most popular language on GitHub, with 40 percent more pull requests opened this year than last." Python remains the fourth-most searched for programming language on the Tiobe Index. Python also topped IEEE Spectrum's The 2017 Top Programming Languages (July 2017). As evidence of Python's growing familiarity, there is word that "Microsoft Considers Adding Python as an Official Scripting Language to Excel."

Versions of Python released in 2017 include Python 3.3.7 ("final release" of Python 3.3.x that "has reached end-of-life"), Python 3.4.7, Python 3.5.3, Python 3.6.3, and Python 3.6.4.

Scala

Scala 2.12.4 was released and includes "improved Java 9 friendliness."

The first release of Scala Native (0.1) was announced in 2017 and its GitHub page states, "Your favorite language gets closer to bare metal." The main Scala Native page describes Scala Native as "an optimizing ahead-of-time compiler and lightweight managed runtime designed specifically for Scala."

Ammonite, an open source project dedicated to scripting with Scala, moved toward its 1.0 release in 2017 and Ammonite 1.0.3 is available at time of this writing.

Rust

The Rust programming language continues to grow in popularity in 2017. The Rust Programming Language Blog features a post "Rust in 2017: what we achieved" that covers the highlights of achieving Rust goals in 2017 related to a "single overarching theme" of "increasing productivity, especially for newcomers to Rust." Jimmy Cuadra posted in 2017 "The highs and lows of Rust (2017)." The blog posts "Entering the Quantum Era - How Firefox got fast again and where it’s going to get faster" and "Mozilla Made the Web Better for Developers in 2017" discuss how Rust was an integral part of making the Firefox web browser faster.

Go

The "Go" programming language continues to gain in popularity in the development community. In early 2017, Mariano Gappa wrote about Movio Cinema's Red Squad's adoption of Go. Around the same time, Keval Patel wrote "Why should you learn Go?" IEEE Spectrum lists Go in its "Top Ten Languages for the typical Spectrum reader" and InfoWorld's Paul Krill wrote "Go language soars to new heights in popularity."

The Go programming language in 2017 continued to head towards version 2.0 with releases that included go1.8, go1.9, go1.9.2, and go1.10beta versions.

The open source Joy project (Joy Compiler) for "translat[ing] idiomatic Go into concise Javascript that works in every browser" was introduced in 2017. The Joy FAQ states that it's possible that the Joy Compiler could one day allow for translating Go code to WebAssembly, but there are currently some hurdles to that happening.

In 2017, JetBrains announced the name for its Go IDE: GoLand. GoLand is a commercial (not open source) IDE that "extends the IntelliJ platform with the coding assistance and tool integrations specific for the Go language."

The Golang Weekly Team summarizes Go achievements in 2017 at the beginning of their Golang Weekly Issue 192.

C++

C++17 (also known as C++1z) became "feature complete" in 2017. Bartlomiej Filipek has provided an overview of C++17 features in the appropriately named post "C++ 17 Features" and has posted "7 Features of C++17 that Will Simplify Your Code." The document "Changes between C++14 and C++17 DIS" covers "all the major changes that have been applied to the C++ working draft since the publication of C++14, up to the publication of the C++17..."

The JetBrains Developer Ecosystem Survey 2017 for C++ found that nearly two-thirds of the respondents currently use C++11 and a little more than one-third of the respondents currently use C++14 (respondents must have been allowed to indicate current use of more than one version of C++).

C

C has been named the Tiobe Index's "programming language of the year" for 2017. The "TIOBE Index for January 2018" states that C won this distinction primarily "because there were no outstanding alternatives" and explained at least part of C's resurgence on that index: "A possible reason for this revival is that C is very popular in the growing manufacturing and machine industry (including the automotive market)."

Spring

Josh Long, the Spring Developer Advocate at Pivotal, has written the post "This Year in Spring - 2017" in which he reviews "this very exciting year in Spring and its ecosystem." Some of the Spring-related highlights of 2017 covered in that post include the release of Spring Framework 5.0, release of Pivotal Cloud Foundry (PCF) 2.0, introduction of Spring Cloud Function, and Project riff ("a function service designed to run on Kubernetes").

Spring Framework 5 requires Java 8, includes support for Kotlin, and introduces a reactive programming model based on the Reactor project implementation of the Reactive Streams Specification for the JVM.

JUnit

JUnit 5 was released in 2017 (General Availability in September and 5.1.0-M1 in November). JUnit 5 breaks JUnit tradition and is composed of three sub-projects (JUnit Platform, JUnit Jupiter, and JUnit Vintage). JUnit 5 requires Java 8 to run, but can be used to test Java code built against an older version of Java. Posts written in 2017 regarding JUnit 5 include Embrace JUnit 5, The Basics of JUnit 5 - A Preview (and A Look at JUnit 5's Core Features & New Testing Functionality), The five coolest new features of JUnit 5, What's New In JUnit 5?, and Seven Reasons Why You Should Start Using JUnit 5 Today.

I don't know enough about the software testing world to talk about general software testing developments of 2017, but Cynthia Dunlop's post "The Top Software Testing News of 2017" seems like a good place to start for such an overview. Dunlop opens the article, "It's not every year that 'software testing' hits the headlines across publications such as Forbes, Fortune, and Reuters. But these are no ordinary times for software testing. Agile and DevOps, which are designed to disrupt development, have also thrown software testing into turmoil—causing a shake-up in the software testing tools industry. This is evident by the string of software testing tool company acquisitions, spin-merges, and funding rounds that ended up dominating software testing news throughout 2017." One of the stories referenced and briefly described in that article is the InfoQ article "JUnit 5 is Released."

Munich Switches from Linux Back to Windows

In 2003, the city of Munich decided to move from Windows to Linux. This was an exciting time for Linux advocates in particular, but also for open source advocates in general. Unfortunately, there started to be some bad news coming out of this transition as early as 2004 and it was announced in 2017 that Munich would be returning to Windows. The reactions to this differ depending on who you ask (see "Munich Is Ditching Linux For Purely Political Reasons" and "Munich ends its long-running love affair with Linux"), but there's no doubt this move is a disappointment to the many open source and Linux users who thought the Munich "experiment" would lead the way for other world cities.

The switch from Linux back to Windows is likely far less devastating to Linux and open source adoption in 2017 than it would have been in te 2003-2004 timeframe. Open source and Linux are both well entrenched now and I don't see them losing ground in the near future. However, this is still a big enough story to make my "honorable mention" section and is the #2 story highlighted in the post "Biggest Linux News Stories of 2017."

Chaos Engineering

Introduced by NetFlix in 2014 (though used earlier by NetFlix) to help address issues seen more regularly with the rise of cloud computing and microservices, the principles of chaos engineering seemed to reach new heights of popularity in 2017. There were multiple articles and blog posts written on this topic in 2017 including InfoQ's Chaos Engineering, The Discipline of Chaos Engineering, How Chaos Engineering Can Bring Stability to Your Distributed Systems, Nora Jones on Establishing, Growing, and Maturing a Chaos Engineering Practice, Chaos Engineering at Netflix – What It Is & How It Works, and Designing Services for Resilience: Nora Jones Discusses Netflix Chaos Engineering at QCon SF. O'Reilly also made its free (when name and e-mail address are provided) ebook Chaos Engineering: Building Confidence in System Behavior through Experiments available.

Principles of Chaos Engineering describes chaos engineering as "the discipline of experimenting on a distributed system in order to build confidence in the system's capability to withstand turbulent conditions in production." O'Reilly's Chaos Engineering page states that chaos engineering is "a method of experimentation on infrastructure that brings systemic weaknesses to light" and adds that "this empirical process of verification leads to more resilient systems, and builds confidence in the operational behavior of those systems." Awesome Chaos Engineering is "a curated list of awesome Chaos Engineering resources."

Ruby

Ruby 2.5 was released on Christmas Day in 2017 (a new release of Ruby on Christmas Day has become an annual tradition). Junichi Ito's post "10 new features in Ruby 2.5" introduces his "handpicked 10 new features" from Ruby 2.5's "new features and performance improvements."

There has been some discussion online about Ruby declining in popularity (Java and other languages have experienced such talk for years). In "Ruby on Rails is out: major coding bootcamp ditches it, due to waning interest," Matthew Hughes writes, "The pivot away from Rails shouldn't surprise anyone. While the framework continues to have a strong, cohesive community, and is actively developed and supported, developer interest has largely shifted elsewhere." Hughes also quotes Zed Shaw and Paul Watson on potential explanations for (slight so far) declining Rails popularity (newer competitors in web development with focus on front-end and single page applications).

PostgreSQL

PostgreSQL 10 was released in late 2017 and includes several new features such as logical replication, declarative table partitioning, improved query parallelism and other general performance improvements, and improved monitoring and control. PostgreSQL versioning is also changing with PostgreSQL 10 to a 2-digit version number instead of the old 3-digit version numbers.

PostgreSQL was named "DBMS of the Year 2017" by DB-Engines. The DB-Engines Ranking is updated monthly and "ranks database management systems according to their popularity." A particular database management system wins the annual prize for having the most significant increase in ranking over the 12 month period.

Conclusion

This post looked at some of the developments in software development that occurred in 2017. I undoubtedly missed some things and missed some developments associated even with some of the listed items. This post will be updated in the coming days and weeks as I remember some of these things or as feedback points out some of these missing items.

Saturday, December 31, 2016

Significant Software Development Developments of 2016

This post is my personal and opinionated assessment of some of the most significant developments related to software development in 2016. This is my tenth year for this annual post and my previous years' assessment are available for 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008, and 2007. As with these previous years' assessments, this assessment of 2016's major developments in software development are obviously biased, opinionated, and limited to my perspective.

10. Tumultuous Year for Java

Java and the JVM are used by a significant percentage of software developers worldwide. With the increasing adoption of Java 8 and the enthusiasm Java 8 has helped to reinvigorate among Java developers, Java SE and the JVM seem well positioned for the future. Unfortunately, Java EE faced more issues in 2016. 2016 saw the rise of the Java EE Guardians in response to a lack of news from Oracle regarding the future of Java EE. Oracle eventually did respond in advance of JavaOne 2016 with plans for Java EE 8 being more cloud and microservices oriented. Oracle has also stated that their survey of Java EE developers has shown that REST and HTTP/2 support are of prime importance.

Even Java SE did not survive 2016 unscathed. In this last month of 2016, an article appeared in The Register called Oracle finally targets Java non-payers - six years after plucking Sun stated, "Java SE can be free, although Java SE Advanced Desktop, Advanced and Suite are not. ... There's also no way to separate the paid-for Java SE component products from the free Java SE umbrella at download as Oracle doesn't offer separate installations – they're all bundled together and that leads to confusion and mistakes down the line when paid-for features are unexpectedly used." Several articles and posts have tried to add clarifying details, but all of these together do leave the impression that it's a licensing situation that is more difficult than it should be. Other posts on the subject include Java SE Offerings, The Sky Is Falling: Oracle (Might) Want Your Money for Java SE in 2017, and Java Champions response to The Register Article on Java SE usage.

See the post Goodbye 2016 (Hello 2017) for more details on Java in 2016. Another year-end discussion surrounding Java is available in the OverOps's blog post If You've Written Java Code in 2016 - Here Are the Trends You Couldn't Have Missed. Another OverOps's Takipi blog post on Java in 2016 is Java Community Oscars - The Top 10 Posts of 2016 (published since the publication of my post).

9. DevOps

Although the DevOps concept has been around for a while now, it's gained popularity with the "suits" (management) and the term is thrown around in all types of contexts. Software product vendors emphasize how their products continue to DevOps and software development requisitions and job listings are filled with references to experience with DevOps.

8. Angular 2

Angular 2 final was released in 2016 and was a significant re-write of the already popular Angular framework. The Angular 1 TO 2 Quick Reference documents "many conceptual and syntactical differences between Angular 1 and Angular 2." The article Angular 2 and TypeScript - A High Level Overview points out that Angular 2 was re-written in Microsoft's TypeScript language and that this is the "recommended language for developing applications using the [Angular] framework" (although Angular-based applications can also be written in JavaScript and Dart). There are many things to like about TypeScript, especially for those of us with more Java experience than JavaScript experience.

The Angular community also provided a react-native-renderer library in 2016 for using "Angular 2 and React Native to build applications for Android and iOS." There is also now a dedicated AngularDart team that supports the Dart implementation of Angular that is, as of 2016, separate from the TypeScript/JavaScript code base. Before this, the Angular 2 codebase was entirely TypeScript and was compiled to Dart.

Angular news in 2016 included the adoption of semantic versioning for releases and the releases of Angular 1.6.0, Angular 1.5.0, Angular 2.4.0, Angular 2.3.0, Angular 2.2.0, Angular 2.1.0, the final release of Angular 2 (2.0.0), and several Angular 2 release candidates (RC7, RC6, RC5, RC4, RC3, and RC2).

Angular continued to enjoy adoption and coverage in 2016 and it already looks like 2017 will be a big year for Angular with the announced release of Angular 4 (skipping an Angular 3).

7. Internet of Things (IoT)

The term "Internet of Things" (IoT) has been around for a while and even discussed in mainstream media for a while, but the concept seems to come up in many different technology-related articles and posts in 2016. Because the IoT concept is related to Big Data and Cloud Computing, it is not surprising that it becomes a more prevalent topic as those related topics become increasingly prevalent. The rise of IoT also brings with it significant new privacy and security risks while also bringing convenience to users.

The post IoT 2016 in review: The 8 most relevant IoT developments of the year talks about the increasing presence of consumer IoT with products such as Amazon Echo. This article also discusses the "biggest overall [IoT] story" of 2016: "IoT Security attack on Dyn servers," a story which is part of my reasoning for Software Security being the #1 story/development of 2016 for software developers.

The CRN slideshow The 10 Biggest Internet Of Things Stories Of 2016 states that "2016 was an even bigger year for IoT" and outlines their perspective on the biggest IoT stories on 2016. Their top story for the year is IoT Devices Compromised In DDoS Attack.

6. Microsoft and Open Source

The Linux Foundation's announcement in November that "Microsoft has joined the [Linux Foundation] [as] a Platinum member" would have been unfathomable a decade ago, but is less surprising in 2016 given Microsoft's open source contributions that include Ubuntu on Windows 10, PowerShell (Linux and Macs), Xamarin SDK, TypeScript, and numerous other products, libraries, and frameworks available on the Microsoft GitHub repositories.

Other Microsoft-related announcements in 2016 include SQL Server running on Linux, Microsoft joining the Eclipse Foundation, and the release of Visual Studio Code 1.0 for Linux. Microsoft also announced Windows Server 2016 this year, which features support for Windows Containers (Docker-based; Microsoft has a commercial partnership with Docker). Microsoft also brought support for React Native to Windows (Universal Windows Platform).

5. Big Data

Big Data remains, well, "big," in 2016. In 2016: The Year in Big Data, Tim Spann writes that "2016 has been an interesting year" in which "Big Data got big general interest when various machine learning algorithms were predicting who may become president (and were a bit off)." Spann also writes that 2016 was a year in which Big Data experienced "new advances in tools, an expanded focus on IoT, and new ways of ingesting and manipulating data." The post 5 Leading Developer Stories of 2016 emphasizes, "Big Data's Big Numbers Became Impossible to Ignore in 2016.

4. Cloud Computing

Cloud Computing remained a hot topic in 2016. In the article Why the cloud? In 2016, it was the lure of the new, Eric Knorr writes that "incredible new features all pre-provisioned and waiting for you in the cloud" was the primary reason for enterprises moving to the cloud in 2016. Knorr writes about the cloud offerings' support for machine learning, IoT platforms, serverless computing, and containers management. The IBM blog post The top 10 Thoughts on Cloud articles of 2016, states, "Much of the cloud computing news of 2016 focused on exponential growth in need and demand, which will reach into the following year and beyond."

Related to both Cloud Computing and Big Data is the concept of Fog Computing, which also seems to be slowly gaining momentum in 2016.

3. Microservices

Although I see "Docker", "containers", "Big Data", "Cloud Computing" and similar terms all over the software development blogosphere, I don't think there's a more prevalent topic in that sphere than "microservices." Bilgin Ibryam has written that microservices are a commodity and concludes, "In the Microservices world things are moving from uncharted to industrialized direction. Most of the activities are not that chaotic, uncertain and unpredictable. It is almost turning into a boring and dull activity to plan, design and implement Microservices. And since it is an industrialized job with a low margin, the choice of tool, and ability to swap those platforms plays a significant role."

The microservices architecture approach has been used by enough organizations over enough time now to start sharing lessons learned and best practices. In fact, many of the underlying ideas behind microservices have existed for much longer than the term itself. In the post Working with microservices framework still a challenge in 2016, Tom Nolle writes, "Technology innovation is often hampered by fast-moving waves of hype that confuse senior management with benefit claims that can't be met early in a technology's evolution. Microservices really took off as a concept in 2016 and have been vulnerable to premature expectations." Knoll writes about some positive developments in microservices that helped mitigate this: association with private clouds and with containers and the move toward statelessness in microservices. Knoll also writes about misuse of microservices contributing to a negative experience with them.

Some signs of the increasingly prevalent use of microservices include many corporations adopting the term for their products and services. Other signs include the numerous posts for (mostly) and against (blind) adoption of microservices. These very recently published posts include How can a big enterprise benefit from microservices?, Microservices: Good for Customers, Good for Business, Why Isn't Microservices for Everyone?, Maybe beware of microservices, Why you should adopt a microservices architecture, and Microservices: Not Just for Nerds Anymore.

2. Docker and Containers

Without putting much effort into verifying it, it felt like I could not browse software development headlines on related social media sites such as DZone without seeing at least one (and often many more) story on Docker or other Linux containers. Serdar Yegulalp's InfoWorld article 2016: When Linux containers became mainstream states, "In truth, 2016 wasn't The Year of the Container. That was 2015, when the possibility and promise of containers came along and knocked IT for a loop. But not everyone wanted creative disruption. Many folks wanted dependable, reliable infrastructure, and they saw in containers a method to do so that had never been done before. The good news was that despite all the momentum around containers in 2016, major parts of the ecosystem began to stabilize. The novelty's worn off, but in a good way - it means there's now more attention on how to do containers right, not merely to do them at all."

I have already written in this post about Microsoft's partnership with Docker. Just this month, Docker announced plans to provide its open source "Core Container Runtime" (containerd) to an open source foundation (changing who controls the open source project). Docker Engine releases in 2016 include 1.13.0, 1.12.3, 1.12.2, 1.12.1, 1.12.0 (including built-in orchestration), 1.11.1, 1.11.0, 1.10.3, 1.10.2, 1.10.1, and 1.10.0.

Since my original post, Top Docker Content Of 2016 has been published.

1. Software Security and Software Outages

I really, really wanted to not have this be the #1 software development in 2016 after having a version of this in the top two spots in recent years (2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015). Unfortunately, the events of 2016 made it impossible for me to bump software security related issues from the #1 spot of developments in software development.

The Norton Protection Blog features the post Data Breaches That Made Headlines in 2016. This post references and summarizes several data breaches including the 2012 LinkedIn breach (117 million released sensitive credentials in 2016), 2012 DropBox breach (68 million credentials exposed in 2016), and the 2013 Yahoo! breach (1 billion accounts breached). In the post Yahoo Announces Breach of One Billion Accounts, Nadia Kovacs writes, "2016 seems to be the year of the 'mega-breach' with us reporting on eight major breaches involving well-known companies. Big data is big money for attackers, so they set their sights on companies that tend to hold large amounts of personally identifiable data on their customers." It's interesting that the three large breaches I referenced actually occurred in previous years, but the magnitude of the breaches was discovered with release of the sensitive data in 2016.

Even the products intended to aid in efforts to secure software and data had their own vulnerabilities exposed in 2016. For example, Google Found Disastrous Symantec and Norton Vulnerabilities That Are 'As Bad As It Gets', Kernel Information Leak & Multiple DOS Issues Within Kaspersky Internet Security Suite, and vulnerabilities associated with a system running Intel's McAfee VirusScan Enterprise for Linux.

Issues related to software security played a role in the already strange presidential election in the United States in 2016. Allegations of mishandling of e-mail messages that were potentially made more vulnerable by being on the candidate's own server led to an FBI investigation and pestered a candidate throughout the election. The hacking and exposing of sensitive and sometimes highly opinionated e-mail messages of Democratic National Committee members with some "uncomfortable disclosures" also played out during the election year. There have also been allegations of large-scale hacking of the votes counting. The article US recounts find no evidence of hacking in Trump win but reveal vulnerabilities states that this probably did not occur, but warns that "we found that hacking an election in the US for president would be even easier than I thought." It has also been suggested that cyber attacks were levied against previous elections.

On top of all this, increased hacking of mobile telephones and devices continued with stories such as Android bug fear in 900 million phones. Many end-users were impacted worldwide by the network outages and network congestion caused at least in part to hacked Internet of Things (IoT) devices. Bruce Schneier has written this year that Someone Is Learning How to Take Down the Internet.

The CRN slideshow The 10 Biggest Security Stories Of 2016 starts on the first slide, "Every year, cybersecurity continues to play an even bigger role in both business and consumer decisions. In 2016, new issues around the election, public-private tug of wars over encryption technologies and major attacks brought security even further into the forefront than in years past." That slideshow also references the U.S. presidential election, the Yahoo! breach, and the distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on Dyn as most significant security stories in 2016.

Fahmida Y. Rashid's recent InfoWorld article asks, "Do developers really care about security?" We obviously need to care. I would love to see Software Security not be my #1 development in software development in 2017 and not even be in my top ten, but it's difficult for me to see that happening.

Honorable Mention

The following did not make my top ten, but nevertheless saw major developments in 2016.

Apache NetBeans

Oracle has turned over the freely available open source Java IDE NetBeans to the Apache Software Foundation and NetBeans is now in the Apache Incubator.

Javaslang

Interest in Javaslang seems to have really take off in 2016, probably at least in part due to the increased adoption of Java 8 in 2016. Javaslang is a "functional library for Java 8+" that aims to "reduce the amount of code" and increase "robustness." It provides an Option that is richer than Java 8's Optional and provides "immutable collections and the necessary functions and control structures to operate on these values." A nice introduction to Javaslang can be found in Eugen Paraschiv's Baeldung post Introduction to Javaslang Vavr.

Kotlin

There's no shortage of programming languages targeting the Java Virtual Machine as their runtime and some of them (Scala, Groovy, Clojure, Ceylon etc.) seem to have found success with JVM developers. Without any empirical basis for it, my feeling is that Kotlin may have enjoyed the most coverage and percentage rise in adoption in 2016. This could just be perspective, but JetBrains' purchasing of advertisements on key software development web sites and evangelism of its employees and fans/customers seem to have contributed to Kotlin being mentioned time and time again on the software development sites (especially those with JVM focus).

Kotlin's main page describes it as a "statically typed programming language for the JVM, Android and the browser" that is "100% interoperable with Java." Kotlin 1.0 was released in February of this year and 2016 has seen later releases of Kotlin (1.0.6, 1.0.5, 1.0.4, 1.0.3, 1.0.2, 1.0.1, and several 1.1 milestone releases).

Gradle Script Kotlin was introduced this year and it was announced that Kotlin scripting support would be included with Gradle 3.0 (see status update). The driving factor for Gradle transitioning from Groovy to Kotlin as the primary build script language appears to be the ability of IDEs to better support a statically typed language. A Kotlin NetBeans plugin was also released in 2016.

Since my publishing of this post, it was announced that Spring 5 will support Kotlin.

Gradle

2016 saw the release of Gradle 3.0 as well as the introduction of Gradle Script Kotlin. Gradle Build Scans (cloud-based "shareable and centralized record of a build that provides insights into what happened and why") were also announced at the 2016 Gradle Summit as the first offering of Gradle Cloud Services.

Scala

Scala 2.12.0 (and Scala 2.12.1) was released in 2016 with the Scala 2.12 compiler "completely overhauled to make use of the new VM features available in Java 8." Scala 2.12 requires JVM 8 runtime because "Scala 2.12 is all about making optimal use of Java 8's new features." A less rosy outlook on Scala 2.12 can be found in the post New Scala Release Falls flat.

The Scala Center at EPFL was announced in 2016 as "an open source foundation for Scala" that "will engage with developers in the open-source community in the effort to improve the language, its tools and its documentation" and "will also help developers learn the language through massive open online courses, seminars and other activities."

PHP

Although PHP 7 was technically released in late 2015, it is 2016 that began to see significant adoption of PHP 7. Prateek Tiwari has writes that PHP 7 brings "a new revolution in web development" and Zend's page states, "PHP 7 makes powering the web a whole lot better."

C++

I don't actively develop with C++ anymore, but do find it interesting to see what's happening in that still very active world from time-to-time. Bartlomiej Filipek has posted C++ Status at the end of 2016.

Fragility of Open Source

Like me, most developers I know are generally positive about open source and the possibilities it enables. We have benefited numerous times from a wide variety of open source products. However, nothing is perfect and open source has its own issues. We were reminded of this somewhat dramatically in 2016 when Azer Koçulu liberated all of his modules from NPM after a trademark dispute over kik (now known as hek). It was actually unpublishing of left-pad from NPM that caused the ruckus.

There was controversy surrounding the widely used FindBugs in 2016 as well. In the post Where FindBugs Failed, Nicolai Parlog writes that some of the contributors to FindBugs forked the project as SpotBugs. As of this writing, the main FindBugs page states, "The current version of FindBugs is 3.0.1, released on 13:05:33 EST, 06 March, 2015."

Simon Phipps's article Uproar: MariaDB Corp. veers away from open source talks about MariaDB taking MaxScale from open source to proprietary via a "Business Source License."

One interesting note about these stories related to open source issues is that each of these has been addressed through steps that take advantage of the code in question being open source. Because these projects were open source, others in the community were able to fork the projects when they did not like their direction or replace the essential code when removed code broke things.

StackOverflow Documentation

StackOverflow Documentation premiered in 2016 and is described as "community-curated, example-focused developer documentation, based on the principles of Stack Overflow." As I wrote in my post Will StackOverflow Documentation Realize Its Lofty Goal?, time will tell if this will have anywhere near the effect on software development that StackOverflow has had.

C# / .NET

.NET Core was released in 2016. The .NET Blog post Announcing .NET Core 1.0 describes .NET Core as "a cross-platform, open source, and modular .NET platform for creating modern web apps, microservices, libraries and console applications" that is "available on Windows, OS X and Linux!"

There is a decent chance that C# 7.0 will place C# on my Top Ten list at this time next year. Many of the features of the forthcoming C# 7.0 are available now in Visual Studio "15" Preview 4, released in August 2016. Numerous articles in late 2016 have pointed to C# 7.0 and include What's New in C# 7.0, C# 7 - What to Expect, and New Features in C# 7. VisualStudio 2017 is also forthcoming.

Python

Python 3.6.0 was released in late 2016 as was Python 2.7.13. The Python repository moved to GitHub instead of GitLab in 2016. Much more detailed information on Python in 2016 can be found in Dibya Chakravorty's post Python year in review 2016. I have been watching from time to time the debate about Python 2.x versus Python 3.x in attempt to learn lessons from breaking backwards compatibility and found it interesting in Chakravorty's post that the following was stated, "The debate between Python 2 and 3 is never ending, but the PSF had declared that Python 2.7 will reach end of life in 2020."

Responsive Web Design

The concept of "responsive web design" has been around for a while, but seemed to gain even more traction in 2016, perhaps in part because of Google's efforts to use it and evangelize it. Although 2013 has been declared the year of responsive web design, the years since seem to have continued to see it as a popular concept for dealing with multiple client types.

Progressive Web Apps

There's been a lot of buzz out of Google about progressive web apps. The author of the post What are Progressive Web Apps? opens that post with the only slightly exaggerated, "By now, you’ve probably heard that Progressive Web Apps are the future of all mankind. They’ll bring world peace, end hunger, save the rainbows and unicorns, bring balance to the force, and a whole lot more. In the process, they might even push the mobile web forward, bring parity to web and native apps, and help mobile developers reach more users beyond the confines of the app stores." That same post provides more clarification of progressive web apps, "On the whole, Progressive Web Apps describe a collection of technologies, design concepts, and Web APIs that work in tandem to provide an app-like experience on the mobile web."

The term "progressive web apps" was coined in 2015 and has rapidly generated excitement in the web app development community in 2016.

JavaScript

JavaScript continues to be a widely used language, in large part because of its ability to run in web browsers (and on mobile devices) and on the server. Craig Buckler has written in the post JavaScript: 2016 in Review and concludes, "it's increasingly difficult to keep pace with the latest trends, frameworks and recommendations. Developers struggle when faced with a plethora of options to evaluate. My advice: don’t try to keep up. It's impossible. Whatever system you bet on today will be superseded by something better tomorrow. ... There's only one absolute certainty: JavaScript itself. Learn the language first and keep building on your knowledge. Your experience will help you understand how each framework operates so you can make an informed choice. That choice may be to forego frameworks altogether." This quote tells how far JavaScript has come; the last thing I would have wanted to do when starting with JavaScript many years ago was to use it without a framework to hide all of the idiosyncrasies and corners of the browser DOMs.

JS Foundation

The JS Foundation was formed in 2016 as a Linux Foundation Project "to drive broad adoption and ongoing development of key JavaScript solutions and related technologies." In an example of rebranding (see item below for other rebranding efforts in 2016), the JS Foundation was created from the jQuery Foundation.

React and React Native

Although JavaScript, like Java and other programming languages, seems to have countless frameworks, React seems to me to be the one getting the most attention in the JavaScript community when not counting Angular. The project facebook/react currently has a very slight edge over angular/angular.js in terms of stars rating on GitHub.

In April of this year, the Facebook post React Native: A year in review celebrated "one year since [Facebook] open-sourced React Native." The post Facebook Open Source 2016 year in review celebrates the rapid adoption of React and Native React.

In December 2016, Oculus Connect 3 introduced "the React VR Pre-Release" based on React and React Native.

Software Development Tools Companies' Rebranding

2016 seems to be another Year of Rebranding for many software development tools makers and continues the trend from 2015:

Rust

Although Rust 1.0 was released in mid-2015, 2016 was another year in which it saw increased popularity and made many "trendy" languages lists. The Rust programming language is defined on its home page as "a systems programming language that runs blazingly fast, prevents segfaults, and guarantees thread safety." Its most recent version, 1.14.0, was released just days ago in late 2016, but the year also saw several other releases: 1.13.0, 1.12.1, 1.12.0, 1.11.0, 1.10.0, 1.9.0, 1.8.0, 1.7.0, and 1.6.0 (releases 1.0.0 through 1.5.0 were released in 2015). The "preferred tool for installing Rust" (rustup 1.0.0) was released in late 2016.

One of the key highlights of the "Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results 2016" is, "Developers love Rust." The survey found Rust to rank highest of the programming languages in terms of "most loved" with 79.1%. The Charlie Crawford post How Rust Compares to Other Programming Languages states that Rust is "safer than C/C++" and "more sophisticated than Go." Rachel Roumeliotis writes in Hot programming trends in 2016 that Rust is one of "five languages are on the verge of making it into the big time [this year]." Rust has been named one of Davide Aversa's Most Promising Programming Languages of 2017 and Kyle Prinsloo recommends it as one of the Top Programming Languages to Learn in 2017.

The State of Rust Survey 2016 highlights some of Rust's wins and some things that need to be improved. A book on Rust was published in 2015 and two more are scheduled for 2017. The O'Reilly e-book Why Rust? can currently be downloaded in PDF.

Swift

2016 was a big year for the Swift programming language with the biggest news perhaps being the release of Swift 3.0 (noted as the "first major release of Swift since it was open-sourced", which was one of Swift's major 2015 happenings). Reddit user lkraider describes Swift 3 as "basically the first usable version of the language, applicable from mobile to backend dev." Ted Neward has written about the struggles of updating from Swift 1 to Swift 2 to Swift 3 due to backwards source incompatibility.

Swift was the second "most loved" language (after Rust) in the StackOverflow Developer Survey Results 2016 (it was "most loved" in 2015). Given the target environments for Swift (macOS, iOS, watchOS and tvOS) and without even considering the language's virtues, it's not surprising that it's one of the most commonly used programming languages.

Go

On the Tiobe Index, "Google's Go is TIOBE's programming language of 2016." In other words, Tiobe found that Go was "the programming language that has gained the most popularity" in 2016. Go ended the year in the 13th overall popularity spot with familiar languages such as Java, C/C++/C#, Python, JavaScript, Perl, and PHP still ahead of it overall. The Tiobe page provides explanations for Go's rise in popularity: "The main drivers behind Go's success are its ease of learning and pragmatic nature. It is ... about hands-on experience [and] Go has built-in support for concurrency programming. More and more customers of our company TIOBE are adopting Go in an industrial setting." Of course, everyone has their own definition of how to measure language popularity. Tiobe's site explains their methodology at a high level.

2016 included the seventh anniversary of the "preliminary sketch of Go" being open sourced and the Seven years of Go blog post summarizes some of Go's biggest happenings in 2016. One of these developments was the release of Go 1.7.

Conclusion

Much has happened in the world of software development in 2016. In this post, I have looked at a small subset of these developments. I may add a few more honorable mention items in the next week or two, but wanted to get this published while still in 2016.