CoderFunda
  • Home
  • About us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • About us
  • Home
  • Php
  • HTML
  • CSS
  • JavaScript
    • JavaScript
    • Jquery
    • JqueryUI
    • Stock
  • SQL
  • Vue.Js
  • Python
  • Wordpress
  • C++
    • C++
    • C
  • Laravel
    • Laravel
      • Overview
      • Namespaces
      • Middleware
      • Routing
      • Configuration
      • Application Structure
      • Installation
    • Overview
  • DBMS
    • DBMS
      • PL/SQL
      • SQLite
      • MongoDB
      • Cassandra
      • MySQL
      • Oracle
      • CouchDB
      • Neo4j
      • DB2
      • Quiz
    • Overview
  • Entertainment
    • TV Series Update
    • Movie Review
    • Movie Review
  • More
    • Vue. Js
    • Php Question
    • Php Interview Question
    • Laravel Interview Question
    • SQL Interview Question
    • IAS Interview Question
    • PCS Interview Question
    • Technology
    • Other

19 October, 2022

The State of Laravel Survey 2022

 Programing Coderfunda     October 19, 2022     Laravel, php     No comments   

 Laravel celebrated its 10th-anniversary last year. Today it is the most popular PHP framework used by thousands of developers. The ecosystem around Laravel is huge, and new trends are constantly popping up. This survey attempts to gain insight into the representation of this outstanding community's diverse technologies and behaviors.

Each year Tobias Petry leads a community effort to collect information on the state of the Laravel community by running a survey. It is an effort to gain insights into where we are as a community so that we might understand where we are. It is not something backed by a major corporation, nor is it something that collects the data to sell. Instead, it is a simple way for us as the Laravel community to understand where we are - and how we might be able to move forward. Where the trends are leaning and how we might react to that.

It is a fantastic initiative with honest intention and insights that we as a community need. Let's have a look through the statistics for last year to understand where we are coming from:

Various statistics were gathered from this survey, from location to gender and team size - all of which are interesting statistics. But I am going to focus on a few specifics for this article.

The years of programming experience is interesting, and we have the majority of submissions sitting between 2 and 10 years - with 10-20 years leading closely behind. I wonder how much this will change this year?

Year of Experience

Let's compare this to their Laravel experience:

So the trend here is around what you would expect. Many developers with 2-5 years of experience are using Laravel, which is very similar to the years of programming experience. The reason we have nothing over ten years is due to Laravels age. You can see the point in people's careers that Laravel came out - and the impact it has had on people adopting it.

Let's compare the usage of different PHP versions people are using next.

It is good to see this statistic leaning this way. More and more people moving their PHP versions forward is a massive step for the PHP community as a whole. As our language progresses, we are becoming more strict on standards and patching, and this chart shows that nicely. There will always be legacy projects that are impossible to upgrade, or the client doesn't have the budget. But the trend is leaning towards the newer and better versions of our beloved language.

Code editors is another interesting one. What are people using to write their code on a day-to-day basis?

Leading the charge is PhpStorm. It is a fantastic product, and it is good to see so many in the community investing in quality tools. Coming in a close second is VS Code, which is getting better and better with each release - and with the right configuration, it can behave almost as well as PhpStorm. Will this year change at all? How about next year with the price increase of the licensing for PhpStorm?

Lastly, let's look at the Operating System usage.

This is pretty well balanced, and you can see the effect of development tooling being focused around the Mac in the Laravel community having a big impact here. It isn't a huge difference between the main competitors - and I am very interested to see what the 0.18% use 👀

So as you can see, the stats aren't anything that will change your mind - but looking through them, we can understand where our fellow developers are, giving us an insight into our market. We have a highly saturated mid-senior level running on PHP 8 and 7.4, mainly using macOS. The most significant amount of contributions for last year did come from Europe, but the creator of the survey is from this continent, so perhaps it is an inadequate representation for everywhere.

Let's see what we can do this year? Perhaps we can start seeing more submissions from the US and Eastern Europe as well as Australia and Asia? Hopefully, we will see the gender split level out more thanks to the fantastic work of communities such as Larabelles.

You can contribute to this year's survey here, and help get more insights into the community.

  • Share This:  
  •  Facebook
  •  Twitter
  •  Google+
  •  Stumble
  •  Digg
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook

Related Posts:

  • Smart Error Checking and Refactoring Development Tool for LaravelMicroscope is a Laravel development tool that includes smart checks to discover errors related to your applications. The highlight features accor… Read More
  • Laravel HTTP Client Logger P Client Logger is a logger for the built-in Laravel HTTP client. It makes logging the request and response simple by sending it to a confi… Read More
  • Short URL Package for Laravel Applicationst URL by Ash Allen is a Laravel package for creating shortened URLs in your Laravel applications. You can easily create a new short URL… Read More
  • Sidecar packages, deploys, and executes AWS Lambda functions from your Laravel application.Sidecar is a package by the Hammerstone team that takes the pain out of the packaging, deploying, and executing of AWS Lambda … Read More
  • Use Leaflet.js and Google Maps Blade Components in Laravel Laravel Maps is a package to easily create maps using Leaflet.js or Google Maps and Blade components. The main features that work… Read More
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Thanks

Meta

Popular Posts

  • Vue3 :style backgroundImage not working with require
    I'm trying to migrate a Vue 2 project to Vue 3. In Vue 2 I used v-bind style as follow: In Vue 3 this doesn't work... I tried a...
  • SQL ORDER BY Keyword
      The SQL ORDER BY Keyword The ORDER BY keyword is used to sort the result-set in ascending or descending order. The ORDER BY keyword sorts ...
  • Enabling authentication in swagger
    I created a asp.net core empty project running on .net6. I am coming across an issue when I am trying to enable authentication in swagger. S...
  • failed to load storage framework cache laravel excel
       User the export file and controller function  ..         libxml_use_internal_errors ( true ); ..Good To Go   public function view () : ...
  • Features CodeIgniter
    Features CodeIgniter There is a great demand for the CodeIgniter framework in PHP developers because of its features and multiple advan...

Categories

  • Ajax (26)
  • Bootstrap (30)
  • DBMS (42)
  • HTML (12)
  • HTML5 (45)
  • JavaScript (10)
  • Jquery (34)
  • Jquery UI (2)
  • JqueryUI (32)
  • Laravel (1017)
  • Laravel Tutorials (23)
  • Laravel-Question (6)
  • Magento (9)
  • Magento 2 (95)
  • MariaDB (1)
  • MySql Tutorial (2)
  • PHP-Interview-Questions (3)
  • Php Question (13)
  • Python (36)
  • RDBMS (13)
  • SQL Tutorial (79)
  • Vue.js Tutorial (68)
  • Wordpress (150)
  • Wordpress Theme (3)
  • codeigniter (108)
  • oops (4)
  • php (853)

Social Media Links

  • Follow on Twitter
  • Like on Facebook
  • Subscribe on Youtube
  • Follow on Instagram

Pages

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • About us

Blog Archive

  • September (100)
  • August (50)
  • July (56)
  • June (46)
  • May (59)
  • April (50)
  • March (60)
  • February (42)
  • January (53)
  • December (58)
  • November (61)
  • October (39)
  • September (36)
  • August (36)
  • July (34)
  • June (34)
  • May (36)
  • April (29)
  • March (82)
  • February (1)
  • January (8)
  • December (14)
  • November (41)
  • October (13)
  • September (5)
  • August (48)
  • July (9)
  • June (6)
  • May (119)
  • April (259)
  • March (122)
  • February (368)
  • January (33)
  • October (2)
  • July (11)
  • June (29)
  • May (25)
  • April (168)
  • March (93)
  • February (60)
  • January (28)
  • December (195)
  • November (24)
  • October (40)
  • September (55)
  • August (6)
  • July (48)
  • May (2)
  • January (2)
  • July (6)
  • June (6)
  • February (17)
  • January (69)
  • December (122)
  • November (56)
  • October (92)
  • September (76)
  • August (6)

  • Failed to install 'cordova-plugin-firebase': CordovaError: Uh oh - 9/21/2024
  • pyspark XPath Query Returns Lists Omitting Missing Values Instead of Including None - 9/20/2024
  • SQL REPL from within Python/Sqlalchemy/Psychopg2 - 9/20/2024
  • MySql Explain with Tobias Petry - 9/20/2024
  • How to combine information from different devices into one common abstract virtual disk? [closed] - 9/20/2024

Laravel News

  • Cast Model Properties to a Uri Instance in 12.17 - 6/4/2025
  • Simplify Negative Relation Queries with Laravel's whereDoesntHaveRelation Methods - 5/31/2025
  • Efficiently remove expired cache data with Laravel Cache Evict - 6/3/2025
  • Test Job Failures Precisely with Laravel's assertFailedWith Method - 5/31/2025
  • Prism Relay - 6/2/2025

Copyright © 2025 CoderFunda | Powered by Blogger
Design by Coderfunda | Blogger Theme by Coderfunda | Distributed By Coderfunda