🆚 C# vs. Dart
- 📈 C# is much more popular than Dart.
- 🌍 C# is more popular in all countries.
Type
About
C# is a high-level, statically typed, object-oriented programming language developed for the .NET platform.
It features strong type safety, automatic memory management via garbage collection, async and parallel programming support, LINQ for data querying, rich standard libraries, and is widely used for building desktop, web, and enterprise applications.
Dart is an object-oriented, class-based, garbage-collected programming language developed by Google for building cross-platform applications from a single codebase.
It supports both ahead-of-time and just-in-time compilation, asynchronous programming, enforces null safety, provides a package ecosystem with thousands of packages, and compiles to native machine code, JavaScript, or
WebAssembly.
Headquarters
Categories
Popularity
Determined by the number of sites using each technology.
Market share
Popularity by country
Determined by the number of sites detected from each country.
Awards
- 🥈 Second most popular in Brunei Darussalam in the Programming Languages category.
- 🥉 Third most popular in the United States in the Programming Languages category.
- 🥉 Third most popular in the United Kingdom in the Programming Languages category.
- 🥉 Third most popular in China in the Programming Languages category.
- 🥉 Third most popular in Italy in the Programming Languages category.
Popularity by domain category
Determined by the number of sites in each category.
Top sites
Top-ranked sites that use these technologies.
Compare alternatives
Technologies with similar characteristics.
See also
🗃️ About This Data
- We evaluate the popularity of technologies based on the number of websites where we detect their usage.
- Technologies without a detectable web footprint, and those we do not track, are not reflected in the calculated market share.
- This report is based on the analysis of 3,375,483 websites.
- Statistics were last calculated on .
- For more details, see our methodology and disclaimer.