![]() Developers can log in to JRebel Social beta using their Twitter or Facebook login IDs. JRebel Social ( ) works by identifying authorized users and automatically delivering a JRebel license token directly to the developer. For a while now, we’ve been trying to think of a good way to offer a free version of JRebel, and I think we’re off to a good start with the JRebel Social beta,” commented ZeroTurnaround’s CEO, David Booth. “JRebel Social is meant for anyone working on non-commercial projects who is tired of building and redeploying their code. ZeroTurnaround OÜ, creator of award-winning Java productivity software for both development and production environments, today released JRebel 4.5 and announced JRebel Social, a beta version of the popular “redeploy killer” that is free for non-commercial use. Eclipse (24%), VSCode (18%), and Netbeans (6%) are following IntelliJ.Tartu, Estonia (PRWEB) September 21, 2011 The second place belongs to Gradle (23% of developers), and Ant is in the third place (6%).Ĭurrently, IntelliJ IDEA is the most popular IDE for developing Java applications, with 48% of respondents choosing it as their preferred development environment. Tomcat is followed by JBoss/Wildfly (15%), Jetty (13%), WebLogic (7%), WebSphere (5%) and GlassFish (4%) application servers.Īmong the build tools, the Maven framework is the leader (68%). Java Developer Tools: Apache Tomcat and IntelliJ IDEAAccording to the survey, Apache Tomcat is the most popular Java application server, with 48% of developers using it. Interestingly, larger companies (100+ employees) show higher adoption of microservices at 36%, which contrasts sharply with smaller companies (under 100 employees) at 28%.Īmong the frameworks that developers use to work with microservices, the Spring Boot framework is the leader with 74%.įrameworks Quarkus, Vert.x and DropWizard round out the top four with 5%, 2%, and 1%, respectively. Most companies have applications entirely based on microservices or are currently moving to a microservices architecture. Modular-monolithic applications account for 13% of responses, and service-oriented architectures - for 12%. Microservices-based applications are the most popular (32%), followed by monolithic applications (22%). Java Application Architecture Trends: Microservices and Monolithic ApplicationsThe developers also have spoken about the architecture of the applications they have developed. Generic OpenJDK and AdoptOpenJDK/Adoptium are also among the top three with 27% and 16%, respectively.Ģ.3% of developers choose distributions of OpenLogic OpenJDK. Which JRE/JDK distributions do you prefer?36% of respondents prefer Oracle Java. The programming languages Kotlin, Groovy, and Scala were the least popular amongĭevelopers, but collectively 17% of the developers surveyed use them. Next, come Java 12 or newer (12% of developers) and Java 7 or older (5% of respondents). ![]() Java 11 occupies the second place (it’s popular among 29% of developers). Which JDK version do developers choose?Most developers say they use Java 8 (37% of those surveyed) as their programming language in their primary application. In this text, we have collected the main results of the survey. ![]() Developers from the US, China, and Europe answer the questions about significant industry trends: popular JDK versions, application architecture, and build tools. Every year, JRebel, a company that develops tools to improve the efficiency of Java programming, conducts a survey.
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