Hey folks!
Instead of choosing between JSP, PHP and ASP
go staight to www.sourceforge.net/projects/webwork
and get the latest source snapshot. This is the best
J2EE presentation framework yet and is much better
that STRUTS, COCOON, TAPESTRY, XMLC (to name a few)
The design is supperior (based on J
Q, socket,
file, etc.)
PHP APP
Browser --> PHP --> DB
Usually DB is Postgres/MySQL
So, it depends on your aim...
if you have a small app, can choose platform and DB, go for PHP
My 2c,
JP
-Original Message-
From: J.T. Wenting [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: MiƩrcoles, 10 de
x27;t go wrong will anyway
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Arved
> Sandstrom
> Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2001 14:02
> To: Orion-Interest
> Subject: RE: JSP vs PHP
>
>
> Can't speak for the runtim
Hello Frank,
Check this article from JGuru
http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/view.jsp?EID=10596
Wednesday, January 10, 2001, 5:28:44 AM, you wrote:
FE> Hi,
FE> I just ran into a discussion regarding PHP vs. JSP (and ASP). A claim was
FE> made that PHP was the better alternative as it is quicker
I have used both PHP and JSP. If you understand PHP you can develop it
faster that JSP. The problem is that PHP is very Perl like which is a steep
learning curve and JSP will scale much better. The problem with this
comparison is you are leaving out Servlets. If you do JSP in the Model 2
style wit
Can't speak for the runtime performance - PHP, JSP, and ColdFusion are all
pretty fast - but I can't see how one can pin down development time
differences between PHP and JSP. Maybe with an atomic clock. ColdFusion is
faster still (higher level of abstraction).
IMO the only sensible basis of comp