Andrew Lee wrote:
notbob wrote:
I'm not posting this just to initiate some religious flame war, though it's the perfect subject to do so. No, I actaully want some serious advice about these two languages and since I think usenet is the best arena to find it,
here ya' go.

So, here's my delimna: I want to start a blog. Yeah, who doesn't. Yet, I
want learn the guts of it instead of just booting up some wordwank or
whatever. I started to learn python, but heard php was easier or faster or more like shell scripting or... fill in the blank. Anyway, so I change over
to learning php.  Then I run across that blog, Coding Horror, and start
reading articles like this:

http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001119.html

Now what?  Go back to python.  Soldier on with php?  What do I know?  Not
much. I can setup mysql and apache,, but don't know how to use 'em, really.
I use emacs and run slackware and can fumble my way through bash scripts,
but I can't really write them or do lisp. I've taken basic basic and basic C, but am barely literate in html. Sometimes it seems overwhelming, but I persevere because it's more fun/challenging than video games, which bore me to tears. Well, that's my actual question, then. Is php really so bad I'm just
wasting my time?  Or is it really the quickest way to blog functionality?
Would I be better served in the long run learning python, which claims to be easy as pie to learn/program (still looks hard to me). I admit I'm no code geek. But, I'm not completely brain dead, either, and I need something to
keep my geezer brain sparking.  What say ye?

nb

Personally, I believe PHP would get you more productive more quickly for a blog, but it is a potentially brain damaging language in terms of really getting your juices flowing with programming. It is not a general purpose language and suffers from all the limitations of of a tool designed for one job. If you are interested in programming and the blog is your path to that, stick with Python! In particular, immerse yourself in mod_python or look at a framework like Django or Pylons -- the learning curve is steep for any of these technologies but they are a full meal compared to saltine cracker and water of PHP.

And what job is that? I have a lot of batch scripts written in PHP, for instance.

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Jerry Stuckle
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