On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 5:00 AM, Bastien wrote:
>
>
> On 2011-09-20, at 12:05 AM, Tommy Pham wrote:
>
> > ASP? Not ASP.NET? Wow... I haven't any new sites deployed in ASP in
> almost
> > 10 years. IIRC, ASP is nothing more but bunch of spaghetti codes and no
> > OOP. That's why attendance/regi
On 9/19/2011 5:08 PM, Tedd Sperling wrote:
As such, I need information regarding how wide-spread PHP is (i.e., number of
installations), who's using it (i.e., companies, organizations), and how it
compares with other Web Languages (i.e., ASP, Ruby, etc.).
Since it's a school, you might also wan
On 2011-09-20, at 12:05 AM, Tommy Pham wrote:
> ASP? Not ASP.NET? Wow... I haven't any new sites deployed in ASP in almost
> 10 years. IIRC, ASP is nothing more but bunch of spaghetti codes and no
> OOP. That's why attendance/registration is so low. Only main web (server
> side) development
On 19 September 2011 22:08, Tedd Sperling wrote:
> Hi gang:
>
> I need information to convince administrators in "management" that PHP is a
> viable subject that should be taught in college with credits going toward a
> Degree or Certification.
>
> You see, I am pushing for a Web Development Cer
ASP? Not ASP.NET? Wow... I haven't any new sites deployed in ASP in almost
10 years. IIRC, ASP is nothing more but bunch of spaghetti codes and no
OOP. That's why attendance/registration is so low. Only main web (server
side) development languages are ASP.NET (C#), Java, and PHP (listed as
alpha
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 20:17, David Harkness wrote:
>
> LOL! That I totally forgot it used to stand for Perl pretty much proves my
> point. That or focusing on any language for a few years will tend to make
> one fairly myopic. :)
I waited for someone to chime in about Python being included
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 3:22 PM, Daniel Brown wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 18:10, David Harkness
> wrote:
> > Gently remind them that the P in LAMP stands for PHP.
>
> It has become a presumption in that regard, yes, but the 'P' in
> LAMP was actually for Perl.
>
LOL! That I totally for
Sent from my iPhone
On Sep 19, 2011, at 5:08 PM, Tedd Sperling wrote:
> Hi gang:
>
> I need information to convince administrators in "management" that PHP is a
> viable subject that should be taught in college with credits going toward a
> Degree or Certification.
Would another college al
As far as I know it is called LAMPP and not LAMP. So you have PHP and also
Perl. But never the less PHP is one of the most widespread web languages
now-a-days.
2011/9/20 Daniel Brown
> On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 18:10, David Harkness
> wrote:
> > Gently remind them that the P in LAMP stands for PH
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 18:10, David Harkness wrote:
> Gently remind them that the P in LAMP stands for PHP. There's a big reason
> most every web developer can tell you what each letter in LAMP stands for:
> heavy market penetration.
It has become a presumption in that regard, yes, but the '
Gently remind them that the P in LAMP stands for PHP. There's a big reason
most every web developer can tell you what each letter in LAMP stands for:
heavy market penetration.
Peace,
David
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 17:08, Tedd Sperling wrote:
>
> As such, I need information regarding how wide-spread PHP is (i.e., number of
> installations), who's using it (i.e., companies, organizations), and how it
> compares with other Web Languages (i.e., ASP, Ruby, etc.).
There's no really
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 5:08 PM, Tedd Sperling wrote:
> Hi gang:
>
> I need information to convince administrators in "management" that PHP is a
> viable subject that should be taught in college with credits going toward a
> Degree or Certification.
>
> You see, I am pushing for a Web Developmen
Hi gang:
I need information to convince administrators in "management" that PHP is a
viable subject that should be taught in college with credits going toward a
Degree or Certification.
You see, I am pushing for a Web Development Certification program that would
include PHP/MySQL as well as se
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