Peter Lauri wrote:
> Best groupmember,
>
> Why should I choose PHP instead of JSP/Servlets when it comes to develop a
> high-traffic site. Assume that the infrastructure for both are set up. It
> only comes to efficiency (both coding and running)? What are your
> experience?
I believe PHP and JSP
Travis Conway wrote:
Did he really ask that question on a PHP board?
That is like walking into a Coke factory, going to the manager and
asking "pepsi or coke?"
Good a place as any to ask. Sure, the opinions one receives here may be
a bit biased towards php, but most of the users on this list sub
Travis Conway wrote:
Did he really ask that question on a PHP board?
I have met factory managers (though not at the comanies you mention )
who have admitted that their competitors may have the edge :-)
But seriously whether PHP is better or JSP is better is a religious
question. However on the po
ber 11, 2004 7:11 AM
Subject: Re: [PHP] PHP vs JSP?
Peter Lauri wrote:
Best groupmember,
Why should I choose PHP instead of JSP/Servlets when it comes to develop a
high-traffic site. Assume that the infrastructure for both are set up. It
only comes to efficiency (both coding and running)? Wh
Peter Lauri wrote:
Best groupmember,
Why should I choose PHP instead of JSP/Servlets when it comes to develop a
high-traffic site. Assume that the infrastructure for both are set up. It
only comes to efficiency (both coding and running)? What are your
experience?
As a sun certified java programm
Because you prefer it?
Seriously, you should choose what you are most happy with. Both work
fine, although, PHP rocks!
On 11 Dec 2004, at 10:11, Peter Lauri wrote:
Best groupmember,
Why should I choose PHP instead of JSP/Servlets when it comes to
develop a
high-traffic site. Assume that the inf
hi!
i run some really big apps (crms/email/shopping
carts/directories/forums/etc) that make use of persistance type data but
NEARLY all of it is just put in and removed from the DB - just all kinds
of little/big functions that need to maintain some data or state(s) of
some data - my system average
Cpt John W. Holmes wrote:
Agree 100%. Don't assume that just because you use JSP, or any other
language, your program is going to instantly "scale well" and be easy to
maintain. You can write crappy, inefficient code in any language. You can
also write good programs in most any language if you put
--John Holmes...
PS: Sorry for the top-post, OE sucks!
- Original Message -
From: "Jay Blanchard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Jean-Christian Imbeault" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2003 7:46 AM
Subject: RE: [PHP] PHP vs. js
[snip]
I'm worried that PHP won't scale well. And by scaling I don't mean under
heavy load, I mean maintenance wise :) I
can't imagine having to do a feature upgrade on a PHP project with more
than 100 files ... (this file requires that file which requires that one
and so on ...)
[/snip]
This is
> > You might want to look around the jakarta projects and ask questions on
> > some of those mailing lists.
>
> Thanks for the advice. I'll try that. But I *would* like to hear the
> opinions of PHP'ers too. I'm worried that by asking people on that list
> Ill get one-sided views.
Of COURSE yo
Hello
Well here is my opinion on the two.
I think it is a lot easier to get an app ready and running with PHP
(especially database driven) than it is with JSP. The memory footprint of
PHP is a lot lower than with JSP. Alone the JVM that needs to be loaded
requires lots of resources. Also inst
Installing JSP isn't impossible, but it can be a true pain... At least on
windows... There are lots of environiment variables to set (well, two at
least), config files to edit, a directory structure to understand (this is
probably way simplier than I currently think it is)... However, once you get
Joel Rees wrote:
You might want to look around the jakarta projects and ask questions on
some of those mailing lists.
Thanks for the advice. I'll try that. But I *would* like to hear the
opinions of PHP'ers too. I'm worried that by asking people on that list
Ill get one-sided views.
What do PHP
> ...
> Before I start my new project I am considering whether to use PHP again
> or to switch to jsp. I'm worried that PHP won't scale well. And by
> scaling I don't mean under heavy load, I mean maintenance wise :) I
> can't imagine having to do a feature upgrade on a PHP project with more
>
Not really a JSP/PHP issue, but you mention that there's another developer.
Are you in a bidding war with this person? If you're vying for business,
don't get into putting JSP down, not out of hand anyway. Simply state
the benefits that PHP has to offer. Our machines may be weird, but we've
fou
The general php mailing list discusses this every so often, here are a few
threads :
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=php-general&m=97948720824237&w=2
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=php-general&m=97621741324759&w=2
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=php-general&m=97413389003820&w=2
Can
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Just wondering if anyone knows of any links to information relating to PHP vs
> JSP where PHP is my language of choice and another developer is recommending
> JSP but I know nothing about JSP to help me convince the buyer that PHP is a
> better choice.
> ...
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Alex Black [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 7:02 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [PHP] PHP vs JSP
>
>
> http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/linux/0,12249,2646052,00.html
>
> gah:
>
a poorly tuned Oracle database.
My $0.02,
Cal
http://www.calevans.com
-Original Message-
From: Alex Black [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 7:02 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] PHP vs JSP
http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/linux/0,12249,2646052,00.ht
> I've worked on a couple of projects with JSP, and decided to use PHP to
> build binarycloud. 'nuff said :)
>
ok, that's ONCE today.. =)
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e: 14 Jan 2001 15:13:12 -0800
> Subject: Re: [PHP] PHP vs JSP
>
> There is an interesting ZD Net comparison of several
> scripting languages at
> http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/linux/0,12249,2646052,00.html
> Some time ago I did the comparison of JSP to PHP and
> JS
There is an interesting ZD Net comparison of several
scripting languages at
http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/linux/0,12249,2646052,00.html
Some time ago I did the comparison of JSP to PHP and
JSP turned out to be much, much slower.
Now I'm just learning CodeCharge generator and so far
it s
There is an interesting ZD Net comparison of several
scripting languages at
http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/linux/0,12249,2646052,00.html
Some time ago I did the comparison of JSP to PHP and
JSP turned out to be much, much slower.
Now I'm just learning CodeCharge generator and so far
it s
>I'm busy working on a contract .. and we need to do some web based stuff ..
but the client is intent on using jsp and not PHP.
>Is there somewhere where I can get good comparists between the two pro and
cons etc etc ..
Try
http://www-4.ibm.com/software/developer/library/script-survey/?dwzone=linu
Greetings Henti,
While I personally prefer working I PHP after having just finished leading a
team of developers on a large JSP project, I would advise you to use the
technologies that your client is most comfortable with. Especially if they
understand that it will cost more and are willing to pa
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