That's reasonable. It takes a while to get your head around the
thought paradigms that a lot of veteran programmers take for granted;
but it will come to you eventually.
Personally, I started programming with BASIC, then VB, then JavaScript/
Perl/MySQL, then PHP, and I didn't start using Cake (or
You don't have to know PHP in order to start *producing* applications in
CakePHP.
I will not recommend this to a programming newbie but a skilled programmer
in any language will do the transition with ease.
I am doing it my self, I am working with c# .net for the last ten years and
I find the trans
I've been working with PHP for about 6 months and only recently
started studying cakephp. It's been interesting but not even close to
easy for me. Maybe because PHP is my first experience with programming
languages and i had no experience with OOP before start taking
cakephp.
On 13 jun, 20:16, To
If you plan on sticking with Cake (or any other framework for that
matter) you won't be able to help but pick up on php. You can pick up on
both at the same time and cake will make a lot more sense then as well.
It will make life a lot easier.
On 06/13/2010 05:46 PM, Chris Hanson wrote:
ye i
ye i would probably learn the basics and do some playing around with
PHP before jumping into a frameworkbut thats just my opinion. :D
welcome to CakePHP :D
On 13 June 2010 20:04, Jahongir Abdurahmonov wrote:
> I wonder if one should know PHP in order to learn and use CakePHP?
> Should I first
I wonder if one should know PHP in order to learn and use CakePHP?
Should I first learn PHP and then CakePHP?
Check out the new CakePHP Questions site http://cakeqs.org and help others with
their CakePHP related questions.
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups