I didn't expect it to make too much of a difference. Thank you for your
answer.

Yves Vrancken


"Justin French" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I haven't noticed ANY performance hit by skipping in and out of PHP and
HTML
> when it suits me.
>
> I imagine there *might* be a slight performance hit if you were building a
> LOT of table information with print or echo or printf, but the general
> answer to your question is usually "whatever suits you better".
>
> You could run some comparison tests with a microtimer to see what
happens...
>
> I doubt on a 50-100K HTML page that you could notice the difference,
unless
> the site or server got S**TLOADS of hits.
>
>
> Justin French
>
>
>
> on 28/07/02 5:56 PM, Yves Vrancken ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>
> > Greetings,
> >
> > I am new to PHP and trying to implement some PHP and MySQL on my
website. My
> > website has a lot of tables and inside some of those tables, I want to
> > display information that is drawn out of the MySQL database using PHP. I
was
> > wondering what goes faster:
> >
> > (A). Building the whole page normally up in HTML, doing the usual
<table>
> > <td> and so forth, and then inside the <td> calling up the PHP in order
to
> > display the information. For example: <td> <?php ...... ?> </td>
> >
> > (B). Doing everything in the PHP document, also the 'building' of the
> > tables, and then including the PHP script in the main page. For example
> > using printf("<tr><td>  and so forth.
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Yves Vrancken
> >
> >
>



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