Is there any evidence that one of the current alternate JVM languages might catch on?

Posted by FarmBoy on Programmers See other posts from Programmers or by FarmBoy
Published on 2010-12-22T18:01:27Z Indexed on 2011/01/02 17:58 UTC
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There's been a lot of enthusiasm about JRuby, Jython, Groovy, and now Scala and Clojure as the language to be the successor to Java on the JVM.

But currently only Groovy and Scala are in the TIOBE top 100, and none are in the top 50. Is there any reason to think that any of this bunch will ever gain significant adoption?

My question is not primarily about TIOBE, but about any evidence that you might see that could indicate that one of these languages could get significant backing that goes beyond the enthusiasts.

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