37

Does anybody know of any research or benchmarks of how long it takes to develop the same application in a variety of languages? Really I'm looking for Java vs. C++ but any comparisons would be useful. I have the feeling there is a section in Code Complete about this but my copy is at work.

Edit:

There are a lot of interesting answers to this question but it seems like there is a lack of really good research. I have made a proposal over at meta about this problem.

8
  • 5
    Before people start quoting studies comparing lines of code for solutions to identical problems in different languages I want to point out.. People often confuse "development time" with "lines of code". They're not the same. Some "lines" of code take considerable amount of time to debug and perfect. For example regular expressions or SQL queries. You can spend a whole day getting these right!
    – Doug T.
    Dec 12, 2009 at 19:36
  • 1
    Also: readability and maintainability are a very important factor for all development (and thus costs) after the initial writing. Dec 12, 2009 at 19:43
  • 1
    Also, what do you intend to do with this information, assuming it meaningfully exists, which in my experience it does not?
    – anon
    Dec 12, 2009 at 19:54
  • 1
    Which kind of application? A console app? a server or daemon service? A Windows GUI? A linux GUI? A web app? makes a whole lot of a difference...
    – Nir Levy
    Dec 12, 2009 at 19:56
  • 3
    Anybody else think this should be a community post? Dec 13, 2009 at 3:14

15 Answers 15

40

Pratt & Whitney, purveyors of jet engines for civilian and military applications, did a study on this many years ago, without actually intending to do the study.

They went on the same metrics kick everyone else went on in the 1990s. They collected a bunch of data about their jet engine controller projects, including timecard data. They crunched it. The poor sap who got to crunch the data noticed something in the results: the military projects uniformly had twice the programmer productivity and one/fourth the defect density as the civilian projects.

This, by itself, is significant. It means you only need half as many programmers, and you aren't going to spend quite as much time fixing bugs. What is even more important is that this was an apples-to-apples comparison. A jet engine controller is a jet engine controller.

He then went looking for candidate explanations. All of the usual candidates: individual experience, team size, toolsets, software processes, requirements stability, everything, were trotted out, and they were ruled out when it was seen that the story on those items was uniformly the same on both sides of the aisle. At the end of the day, only one statistically significant difference showed up.

The civilian projects were written in every language you could think of. The military projects were all written in Ada.

IN EVERY SINGLE CASE, against every other comer, for jet engine controllers at Pratt & Whitney, using Ada gave double the productivity and one/fourth the defect density.

I know what the flying code monkeys are going to say. "You can do good work in any language." In theory, that's true. In practice, however, it appears that, at least at Pratt & Whitney, language made a difference.

Last I heard about this, Pratt & Whitney upper management decreed that ALL jet engine controller projects would be done in Ada.

No, I don't have a citation. No paper was ever written. My source on this story was the poor sap who crunched the numbers. Here's a similar study from 1995:

http://archive.adaic.com/intro/ada-vs-c/cada_art.html

This, incidentally, was BEFORE Boeing did the 777, and BEFORE the 777 brake subcontractor story happened. But that's another story.

20
  • 6
    I'd be interested to hear if any of the civilian efforts used Ada, and whether their performance was consistent with the military side. Dec 12, 2009 at 20:30
  • 13
    There is a brake subcontractor story? Do tell.
    – stimms
    Dec 12, 2009 at 20:38
  • 4
    "Against every other comer" in the 1990's for aerospace probably meant what, Fortran 77, K&R C, assembly, maybe Algol 68 or Pascal? I think it's significant that there is a difference, but it's not exactly high praise for Ada today, given the gains in compiler technology, the new languages of the past 2 decades, and the looser-but-broader requirements that most programs have than jet engine controllers.
    – Ken
    Dec 12, 2009 at 20:46
  • 2
    @Ken - I worked at P&W as an engineer at that time. Yes, they wrote a lot of Fortran 77 and K&R C, but there was also a lot of C++. Java was starting to come along.
    – duffymo
    Dec 13, 2009 at 0:35
  • 8
    According to adaic.org/atwork/pw.html the only comparison was to assembler so Ada is more productive with less defects than assembler? Shocker!
    – cletus
    Dec 13, 2009 at 6:28
23

One of the few funded scientific studies that I'm aware of on cross-language productivity, from the early 90s, funded by ARPA and the ONR,

We describe the results of an experiment in which several conventional programming languages, together with the functional language Haskell, were used to prototype a Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) requirement for a Geometric Region Server. The resulting programs and development metrics were reviewed by a committee chosen by the Navy. The results indicate that the Haskell prototype took significantly less time to develop and was considerably more concise and easier to understand than the..

6
  • I came in here just to post this link! Dec 12, 2009 at 22:47
  • 1
    How does a 1994 study help with someone making a decision that includes Java or C#?
    – duffymo
    Dec 13, 2009 at 0:39
  • 1
    Java in 1994? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
    – duffymo
    Dec 13, 2009 at 3:53
  • 6
    @duffymo the OP clearly says "any research .. any comparisons would be useful", and this is one of the very few research projects to do such a comparison. Dec 13, 2009 at 4:24
  • It's true that the paper has the word C++ in it, but that's where its relevance stops: the C++ language of 1994 was not standardized, exceptions and templates had just been added in, there was no STL, there was no Boost.
    – rpg
    Dec 13, 2009 at 14:33
15

This article(a pdf) has some benchmarks (note that it's from 2000) between C, C++, Perl, Java, Perl, Python, Rexx and Tcl.

Some common wisdom I believe holds true (also somewhere within the article):

The number of lines written per hour is independent of the language
1
  • 7
    ...but how much those lines achieve is dependent on the language.
    – Sundar R
    Dec 13, 2009 at 16:52
9

Opinion: more important is what is faster for a given developer, for example yourself. What you are used to, will usually be faster. If you are used to 20 years of C++ pitfalls and never skip an uninitialized variable, that will be faster than Java for anybody.

If you remember all parameters of CreateWindowEx() by heart, it will be faster than MFC or winforms.

3
  • 6
    Sure, and if you don't know how to turn on the oven, then starting a fire by rubbing sticks together will be faster. I think what he's looking for is something like "given equivalent experience, what's the distribution of performance?". My oven example isn't unique to the physical world: I know hackers who struggled with Perl for years, and then picked up Python and became more productive with that in a weekend.
    – Ken
    Dec 12, 2009 at 20:33
  • I know experience and skill are difficult to control for but, yes, I'm looking for some empirical studies which attempt to abstract that away.
    – stimms
    Dec 12, 2009 at 20:56
  • 1
    As I say, both questions are legitimate. One is purely academic related to the value of the languages, the other is what a manager should actually be asking in the real world. Dec 13, 2009 at 6:18
7

A couple of anecdotal data points:

On Project Euler, which invites programming solutions to mathematical problems,

  • the shortest solutions are almost invariably written in J or K, a relative of APL; there are occasionally MatLab solutions in the same range. It can be argued, though, that these languages specialized in math.
  • runners up were Ruby solutions. A lot of algorithm can be wrapped in very little code, and it's much more legible than J / K.
  • Python and Haskell solutions also did very well, LOC-wise.

The question asked about "fastest development," not "shortest code." But it's conceivable that shorter solutions are faster to come up with - certainly for slow typists!


There's an annual competition among roboticists. Contestants are given some specs for some hardware, a practical problem to solve in software, and limited time to do so. Again very domain specific, of course. Programmers have their choice of tools, including language of course. Every year, the winning team (often a single person) used Forth.


This admittedly limited sample suggests that "development speed" and "effect of language on speed" is often very dependent on the problem domain.

1
  • 3
    I think some of those results may not be directly related to language, though. In my personal experience, I've found that programmers experienced in languages like Haskell, Forth, etc., tend to be more talented overall than other programmers; likewise, smart programmers tend not to use languages like C, C++, etc., for "fun" problems like Project Eulers, even though they would probably be as successful with those languages.
    – mipadi
    Dec 12, 2009 at 23:10
6

See also

Are there statistical studies that indicates that Python is "more productive"?

for some discussions about this kind of question.

1
  • The link is broken Oct 23, 2019 at 18:14
3

It would make more sense to benchmark the programmers, not the languages. The time to write a program in any mainstream language depends more on the ability of the programmer in that language than on qualities of that specific language.

1
  • I think it can be "hypotetically" assumed that during this experiment there will be the same people with equal knowledge of all those languages. Jan 12, 2011 at 19:57
3

I think most benchmarks and statements on this topic will mean very little.

Benchmarks can always be gamed; see the history of "Pet Store".

A language that's good at solving one kind of problem might not apply as well to another.

What matters most is the skill of your team, its knowledge of a particular technology, and how well you know the domain you're trying to solve.

UPDATE: Control software for jet engines and helicopters is a very specialized subset of computing problems. It's characterized by very rigorous, complete, detailed specs and QA that means the multi-million dollar aircraft cannot crash.

I can second the (very good) citation by John Strohm of Pratt & Whitney control software written in Ada. The control software for Kaman helicopters sold to Australia was also written in Ada.

But this does not lead to the conclusion that if you decided to write your next web site in Ada that you'd have higher productivity and fewer defects than you would if you chose C# or Java or Python or Ruby. All languages are not equally good in all problem domains.

3
  • On the flip-side, I'd much rather use Ada than PHP if there is any handling of monies in the pipeline: PHP plays way too "fast-and-loose" with conversions [esp string/integer & string/float] for my taste. (And it would be a good place to use fixed-point, rather than float.)
    – Shark8
    Sep 23, 2013 at 5:36
  • Fast and loose can be done in any language, including Ada. Solid code can also be written in any language. It's moot.
    – duffymo
    Sep 23, 2013 at 9:25
  • It's true that fast-and-loose CAN be done in any language; however, some are much more accepting/encouraging of it. The thing about PHP's conversion routine is that it's really bad. For instance, if you read the string "08" as an integer the number returned is zero because it treats the zero error-code from parsing the string-representation of octal as the return-value. (And, IIRC, the feature of octal numbers is undocumented, the result of the parser-generator used. [i.e. a bug]) -- so, realistically/experientially, it isn't a moot point at all.
    – Shark8
    Sep 23, 2013 at 15:06
2

Language/framework comparison for web applications

The Plat_Forms project provides some information of this type for web applications.

There are three studies with different tasks (done in 2007, 2011, 2012), all of the following format: Several teams of three professional developers implemented the same application under controlled conditions within two days. It covers Java, Perl, PHP, and Ruby and has multiple teams for each language. The evaluation reports much more than only development time.

Findings of iteration one for instance included

  • that experience with the language and framework appeared to be more relevant than what that framework was.
  • that Java tended to induce teams to make laborious constructions while Perl induced them to make pragmatic (and quite handy) constructions.

Findings of iteration two included

  • that Ruby on Rails was more productive in this type of project (which due to its duration was more rapid prototyping than full-blown development of a mature application)
  • and that the one exception to the above rule was the one team using Symfony, a PHP framework that has similar concepts to Ruby on Rails (but still the very different base language underneath it).

Look under http://www.plat-forms.org or search the web for "Plat_Forms". There is plenty more detail in the reports, in particular the thick techreport on iteration 1.

1

Most programs have to interface with some other framework. It tends to be a good idea to pick the language that has libraries specifically for what you are trying to do. For instance are you trying to build a distributed redundant messaging system? If so I would use Erlang. Are you trying to make a quick and dirty data driven website, use Ruby and Rails. You get the idea. Real time DirectX where performance is key, C++/C/Asm.

If you are writing something that is algorithm based I would look to a functional language like Haskell, although it has a very high learning curve.

1

This question is a little old fashioned. Focusing on development time solely based on the choice of language is of limited value. There are so many other factors that have equal or more impact than the language itself:

  1. The libraries or frameworks available / used.
  2. The level of quality required (ie. defect count).
  3. The type of application (eg. GUI, server, driver etc...)
  4. The level of maintainability required.
  5. Developer experience in the language.
  6. The platform or OS the application is built on.

As an example, many would say Java is the better choice over C++ to build enterprise (line of business) applications. This is not normally because of the language itself, but instead it is perceived that Java has better (or more mature) web server and database frameworks available to it. This may or may not be true, but that is beside the point.

You may even find that the building an application using the same language on different operating systems or platforms gives greatly differing development time. For example using C++ on Linux to build a GUI application may take longer than a Windows based GUI application using C++ because of less extensive and mature GUI libraries avaialble on Linux (once again this is debatable).

0

According to Norvig, Lutz Prechelt published just such an article in the October 1999 CACM: "Comparing Java vs. C/C++ Efficiency Issues to Interpersonal Issues".

Norvig includes a link to that article. Unfortunately, the ACM, despite having a bitmap graphic proclaiming their goal of "Advancing Computing as a Science & Profession", couldn't figure out how to maintain stable links on their webpage, so it's just a 404 now. Perhaps your local library could help you out.

2
  • 1
    I found that article at portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=317683, however it only examines memory usage and runtime
    – stimms
    Dec 12, 2009 at 20:46
  • 1
    It's kind of old, too. It's using GCC2.7 and JDK1.2. I bet things are quite different by now.
    – wbkang
    Dec 13, 2009 at 8:20
0

That Ada story might be an embellished version of this: http://www.adaic.com/whyada/ada-vs-c/cada_art.html

2
  • Rational - no, they didn't have bias in favor of Ada, did they? 8)
    – duffymo
    Dec 13, 2009 at 12:37
  • @duffymo, I remember a talk at GD/FW many years ago. Rational had gathered the data and could flat-out prove that Ada and the R1000 gave an order of magnitude improvement in programmer productivity. The guy giving the talk was ranting on how expensive the R1000 was. I was being nice that day, and didn't point out that 10X improvement in productivity means you can do the same airplane software with 1/10 the programmers, meaning 1/10 the office space, parking lot, and salary and overhead cost. May 15, 2011 at 13:28
0

Erlang vs C++/Corba

"... As the Erlang DCC is less than a quarter of the size of a similar C++/CORBA implementation, the product development in Erlang should be fast, and the code maintainable. We conclude that Erlang and associated libraries are suitable for the rapid development of maintainable and highly reliable distributed products."

Paper here

0

There's a reason why there are no real comparisons in that aspect, except for anecdotal evidence (which can be found in favor of almost any language).

Actually writing code takes relatively small portion of developer's time. Even if language lets you cut coding time in half, it will be barely noticeable by the time project ends. Design, structure of program, development process are all much more important, and then there are libraries, tools and experience with them.

Some languages are better suited for certain development processes than the others, so if you've settled on design and process you can decide which language will be more efficient - but not before.

(didn't notice there's a similar answer already, so feel free to ignore this)

1
  • 2
    I disagree. Language affects the design of the program, the amount of time it takes to debug and the flexibility to change your design. It does make a difference.
    – Casebash
    Oct 15, 2010 at 0:49

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.