1) 98.7% of websites (around 49,501,698 websites) on the Internet use JavaScript as a client-side programming language.
2) India has 584,129 websites that use JavaScript. In the US, 16,988,910 websites use JavaScript.
3) 42.87% of JavaScript professional developers use React.js, whereas 48% of developers are interested in learning this JavaScript framework in 2024 and ahead.
4) Globally, the median yearly salary of JavaScript programmers has increased from 74,034 USD in 2023 to 106,583 USD in 2024, whereas the salary of JavaScript programmers is 146,000 USD in the United States. This is a good omen for the 2025 salary scenario.
5) JavaScript is desired by 40.15% of the developers, while 57.83% of them admire the language for their future business projects lined up for 2024.
6) Python has surpassed JavaScript (3.21%) in the TIOBE Programming Community Index 2023 with a 14.16% rating. This could probably mean the JavaScript community finding a good comeback by the end of 2024 with some new preview releases or updates.
7) The Stack Overflow Report 2023 suggests JavaScript among the top three technologies that professional developers are using and wish to use again in the year of 2024.
8) HTML/CSS (60.73%) and JavaScript (60.51%) are almost next to each other in the race for the most popular languages for people who want to learn JavaScript coding in 2024.
9) There are almost 3,491,140 websites that use the JavaScript framework – Vue.js worldwide.
10) 68.6% of JavaScript developers use Nex.js, which turns out to be the most used backend JavaScript framework, leaving behind Nuxt and Express.
11) The number of JavaScript developers has reduced from 63% in 2021 to 55% in 2023.
12) JavaScript is larger than Java, with a 93.83% market share.
13) JavaScript is the most popular and demanding programming language, which ranks 3rd place from PYPL Index.
14) MATLAB has 23 developer stacks, while JavaScript has 6,471 developer stacks.
15) All major web browsers like Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge support JavaScript.
16) Around 97% of mobile developers use JavaScript for cross-platform mobile app development.