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Perlmonks proportion of Perl's "web presence" ?

by LanX (Saint)
on Jul 17, 2016 at 23:06 UTC ( [id://1167931]=monkdiscuss: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??

Hi

How big is the importance of this site for the internet presence of the Perl community?

Let's assume search results are representative...

... so when searching for Perl code, how probable is it that a search result leads me to the monastery?

I have the impression most elaborated search queries ( like any word + " perl code " ) will show at least one link to this monastery among probably perldoc stuff ( http://perldoc.perl.org ), CPAN-Modules (http://cpan.org,http://metacpan.org), competitors (http://stackoverflow.com) and some hijacked "O'Relly" books.

Is there a way to tell from google or DDG statistics?

I think that the importance is even higher then 10%, because many monastery links are often subsumed under one "master" perlmonks link.

Cheers Rolf
(addicted to the Perl Programming Language and ☆☆☆☆ :)
Je suis Charlie!

EDIT
changed title
  • Comment on Perlmonks proportion of Perl's "web presence" ?

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Re: Perlmonks proportion of Perl's "web presence" ?
by chacham (Prior) on Jul 18, 2016 at 12:16 UTC

    The only true way to measure its effect, is to take it away and see what happens. Of course, other sites would likely pick up some of the slack, but that all depends on what you mean by presence.

    The title says presence, yet the post says importance. Those are two very different things. Things can be important with no presence, and things can have a lot of presence, without being important.

    Perlmonks may not have presence due to other sites that google promotes, yet i don't think that can measure it's importance. That would only come from taking it away and seeing what happens.

      Well I said " importance of this site for the internet presence " and I also defined/proposed a way to measure what I meant by search results with certain queries.

      The web business has surely (more or less reliable) instruments to measure this, at least some Google trends feature which I'm not aware of. (They need something to proof their Search Engine Optimization products, don't they?) °

      Otherwise one could attack the question statistically by querying a dictionary of IT terms + "Perl Language", but I'd be surprised if this doesn't already exist somehow.

      edit

      Do you really read before replying?

      Cheers Rolf
      (addicted to the Perl Programming Language and ☆☆☆☆ :)
      Je suis Charlie!

      footnote

      °) that's why I asked "Is there a way to tell from google or DDG statistics?"

        From casual observation, Google's tracking is scary good. I would expect their system to have that information, but I'm sure it's also considered sensitive internal information.

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