Why PHP is so much more popular for web-development
Brian Jones
bkjones at gmail.com
Wed Jul 25 14:55:28 EDT 2007
Steve Holden wrote:
> walterbyrd wrote:
>
>> "Once you start down the Dark path, forever will it dominate your
>> desiny. Consume you, it will."
>> - Yoda
>>
>> I'm fairly new to web-development, and I'm trying out different
>> technologies. Some people wonder why PHP is so popular, when the
>> language is flawed in so many ways. To me, it's obvious: it's because
>> it's much easier to get started with PHP, and once somebody gets
>> started with a particular language, that person is likely to stay with
>> that language.
>>
>> Before you can even get started with Python web-development, you have
>> to understand this entire alphabit soup of: CGI, FASTCGI, MOD_PYTHON,
>> FLUP, WSGI, PASTE, etc. For me, configuring fastcgi has been the most
>> difficult part of getting django to work. PHP developers don't have to
>> bother with anything like that. With PHP, you just throw some code in
>> the middle of your html file.
>>
I'm primarily a sysadmin, and I provide web hosting-like services to a
community of developers who all want to do their own thing. An obvious,
clean way to do this has, so far, eluded me. Of course I could shove a
framework down the throats of my users, but if given the choice between
picking up a language, or picking up a language, and an accompanying
framework, which may or may not meet their needs, I think they'd pick
the former. In fact, in 6 years, we've never had anyone say "boy I wish
our web servers supported python". They've all been happily using PHP.
I'm in a relatively small shop. But think about an ISP. If you need to
support thousands of users who all have their own agendas, how exactly
do you support that with Python? This is not a rhetorical question - I'd
really like to know :)
In short, I don't think it's the language, but deploying it in a web
context that makes it less popular. If it were simpler, more ISPs might
do it, more users would find what they need with Python instead of PHP,
and it would become a more popular web language, IMHO.
> The latter behavior is typical of programmers. The former is typical of
> typical users. There are many people producing web sites who I wouldn't
> let within yards of any of my code. but it's some kind of tribute to PHP
> that it manages to satisfy so many of them. This doesn't mean that
> grafting PHP features into Python mindlessly will improve the language.
>
I don't think anyone is saying the *language* itself needs improving. I
think there needs to be a cleaner, simpler, more practical way to deploy
Python as a generic web language instead of being forced to deploy it in
the context of some other framework. No ISP wants to impose the implied
limitations on their users, and the users would prefer not to have to
learn a framework.
Also, I just want to point out that in my discussions with other people
who consider themselves primarily Python coders, there are plenty of
them who still turn to PHP for web development. I got into Python for
systems programming (sysadmin tasks and network programming). If I need
to do web-based work, I'm likely to still use PHP because I have no idea
how to deploy/maintain/support Python on the systems end of the
equation. I'd love to be cured of that notion.
brian.
> The Python approach is a scalpel, which can easily cut your fingers off.
> The PHP approach is a shovel, which will do for many everyday tasks.
>
> regards
> Steve
>
--
Brian K. Jones
Python Magazine http://www.pythonmagazine.com
My Blog http://m0j0.wordpress.com
jonesy at pythonmagazine dot com
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