Now would be a good time to point out the etymology of the word "prove"!
Contrary to current usage, its original meaning is "test". So a "proof" is just a test, and not necessarily one that has been passed!
http://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/prove#section_1
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I donated blood yesterday. The nurse was clearly using a Swing application to record patient data.
Taken as a general statement, it is false: the industry uses lots of Java on the desktop.
I missed some users I know of.. Ricoh's InfoPrint Manager, just one of whose clients is responsible for >5% of all mail in the US, has a Swing UI for administration. There's no great advantage to it being in Swing for the user, and there is a web version but it lacks features.
The "scientific approach" would be your *assumption* of 10%, right? :-)
I can still knock out a usable Swing application in less than half the
time and fuss it takes a typical web developer, and with some effort
it can even look good.
That's not at all language design.
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