Trying again.

--Shreyas

On Fri, Jun 4, 2010 at 3:10 AM, Shreyas <shreya...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Larry,
>
> That's a very nice way to learn stuff. That's what I am doing but probably
> in a very crude way.
>
> I am just reading a PHP book and doing those examples. Would you recommend
> any other innovative way of learning and mastering this language?
>
> Regards,
> Shreyas
>
>
> On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 11:25 PM, la...@garfieldtech.com <
> la...@garfieldtech.com> wrote:
>
>> First spend time working with straight up PHP, writing your own stuff,
>> throwing it away, and writing it again.  What you'll learn that way is
>> immeasurable.
>>
>> Then pick a framework (Cake, Drupal, Symfony, Zend, PEAR, whatever) and
>> learn it, maybe two.  Try working with it and extending it.
>>
>> Then do the bulk of your serious work with that framework, having had
>> enough experience to understand what it's doing and why.
>>
>> The timeframe for that process will vary widely from a few months to a few
>> years depending on how quickly you pick stuff up and how much time you have,
>> but that's going to get you the best education and productivity.
>>
>> --Larry Garfield
>>
>>
>> On 6/3/10 12:51 PM, Shreyas wrote:
>>
>>> Folks,
>>>
>>> Just quite could not stop taking your inputs before I start my learning
>>> curve to shape up.
>>>
>>> Should I use one of these frameworks or just *K*eep *I*t *S*imple and
>>> *S*tupid
>>>
>>> and learn it the traditional way? Thoughts?
>>>
>>>
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>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Regards,
> Shreyas
>



-- 
Regards,
Shreyas

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