I think this is a typo, and "for" should be "more":
Rust is a language that generates more desire to use it once you get to know it than JavaScript.
(Even then, it doesn't quite make sense: the "more" has to do double duty, as both "more ... once you get to know it" and "more ... than JavaScript".)
The sense is a bit clearer including the whole sentence:
For example, we can see JavaScript, our most used programming language since 2011, has a relatively short distance between admired and desired (<10 percentage points), while Rust, a top choice for developers who want to use a new technology for the past 8 years, shows a wide distance (>60 percentage points); Rust is a language that generates for desire to use it once you get to know it than JavaScript.
To rephrase the whole thing into bullets rather than one long sentence (six commas, two pairs of parentheses, and one semicolon, but no full stop!):
- JavaScript is our most used programming language since 2011
- JavaScript shows a relatively short distance between admired and desired: less than 10 percentage points
- Rust has been a top choice for developers who want to use a new technology for the past 8 years
- Rust shows a wide distance between admired and desired: more than 60 percentage points
- We conclude that the more you get to know Rust, the more you want to use it; but this is less true for JavaScript
for
loops and therefore generates afor
desire?