Prevalence in a sentence as a noun

It's the prevalence of carbohydrates in our diets, and overeating of the same.

The argument among pro-gun liberals like myself is that it is the latter factors which affect gun crime far more than the mere prevalence of guns.

Theory aside, in practice the greater prevalence of sloppy error handling in languages other than C seems to leave the field pretty level when it comes to robustness.

The prevalence of discrimination toward extreme youth in the software industry is probably a historical artifact of the fact that it's a new industry, so for the most part young people were the ones who "got it.

The prevalence of conspiracy theories and alt-health fearmongering is a leading indicator of an overall breakdown in the implicit trust relationships and social contract that underlies advanced Western societies.

> I keep wondering: Does anyone actually use these social buttons?The suppliers of said social buttons do; every time you see one while you're logged into FB / G+ / Twitter, a hit of you visiting that site is registered at said parties, and they can all, thanks to the prevalence of these sharing buttons, track your internet usage.

If we examine the Microsoft paper linked, it says:"Specific common behaviors of real web sites that are underemphasized in the benchmarks include event-driven execution, instruction mix similarity, cold-code dominance, and the prevalence of short functions"It is not demonstrated, nor is it obviously apparent, that JSLint will be any more typical in these respects than other benchmarks.

Prevalence definitions

noun

the quality of prevailing generally; being widespread; "he was surprised by the prevalence of optimism about the future"

noun

(epidemiology) the ratio (for a given time period) of the number of occurrences of a disease or event to the number of units at risk in the population

noun

a superiority in numbers or amount; "a preponderance of evidence against the defendant"

See also: preponderance