php vs python
Mike Driscoll
kyosohma at gmail.com
Thu May 22 14:34:55 EDT 2008
On May 21, 3:10 pm, notbob <not... at nothome.com> 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
TurboGears and Django are pretty cool Python web application
frameworks. I would recommend looking at them too.
Mike
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