Programming language for a website
Which is the strongest programming language (JSP, ASP, PHP, DotNet)...
SBalan Group
http://www.sbalanprojects.com/
Which is the strongest programming language (JSP, ASP, PHP, DotNet)...
SBalan Group
http://www.sbalanprojects.com/
Shirthead posted this at 10:40 — 26th June 2006.
He has: 58 posts
Joined: Jun 2006
What do you mean by "strongest"?
construction posted this at 10:54 — 26th June 2006.
They have: 111 posts
Joined: Jun 2006
Hey..Thanks Shirthead for ur quick reply.
Well, I want to know exactly which of the mentioned programming languages is quickly growing and best suitable for a website development.
SBalan Group
http://www.sbalanprojects.com/
Shirthead posted this at 10:59 — 26th June 2006.
He has: 58 posts
Joined: Jun 2006
I freely admit to being totally biased, but I'd say PHP. It's free, very popular, well supported, flexible and easy to learn.
I found ASP to be really similar, but prefer working on unix boxes myself. Personally I dfind JSP to be a PITA, but that could just be because I have not used it enough to get very familiar with it. Haven't used dot net at all.
I'm sure it is all horses for courses, but PHP is a pretty good all round solution. If you are just starting out with PHP I'd make sure that you are using PHP 5 from the outset so that you don't have to "unlearn" stuff later on.
Shirthead : Cool T-shirts with a geeky bent
construction posted this at 11:38 — 26th June 2006.
They have: 111 posts
Joined: Jun 2006
Thats really quick Shirthead. Thanks a lot for ur contribution.
Im sure it would be of gr8 help.
SBalan Group
http://www.sbalanprojects.com/
Mark Hensler posted this at 04:43 — 27th June 2006.
He has: 4,048 posts
Joined: Aug 2000
I would second Shirthead's opinion of PHP (especially version 5).
However... I hate blanket statements. While PHP is my favorite tool, my answer would vary based on what you are looking for in a language. If you're just poking around, coding a personal site, looking for a skillset to market as a contractor, etc. Then PHP will server you well.
If you are looking to beef up your resume in the hopes of landing a corporate job. Then I would recommend turning to the 'dark side' and learn the ways of the evil 'M'-pire. That is to say, learn .NET.
BTW, I haven't touched ASP since I left my corporate job. And I haven't looked back (at ASP, I liked working for a stable company).
Mark Hensler
If there is no answer on Google, then there is no question.
construction posted this at 11:17 — 27th June 2006.
They have: 111 posts
Joined: Jun 2006
Thanx Hensler
SBalan Group
http://www.sbalanprojects.com/
Abhishek Reddy posted this at 18:13 — 27th June 2006.
He has: 3,348 posts
Joined: Jul 2001
Something to consider is the context you're operating in too. For example, is the language's popularity an important factor, in terms of server support, or do you control the server so as to choose a better language? Or, how much initial cost (time as well) are you willing to incur, as you learn the language, or hire a programmer? Etc.
Because of the constraints I personally face, I've been able to experiment a little with a few languages that are relatively unpopular for web programming, such as Common Lisp, Python and Ruby. They have been quite good -- enough that I'm convinced to drop PHP in favour of one of them for my next project if viable.
construction posted this at 08:36 — 28th June 2006.
They have: 111 posts
Joined: Jun 2006
Hi Abhishek...
Hey can u give me some more details abt the prog lang. uve mentioned.
SBalan Group
http://www.sbalanprojects.com/
Abhishek Reddy posted this at 14:45 — 28th June 2006.
He has: 3,348 posts
Joined: Jul 2001
You can find more information at these sites:
Ruby:
Ruby language official site
Ruby on Rails framework
Python:
Python language official site
Common Lisp:
Association of Lisp Users Wiki
Practical Common Lisp by Peter Seibel
construction posted this at 06:51 — 29th June 2006.
They have: 111 posts
Joined: Jun 2006
Thanx Abhishek it has been a gr8 contribution
SBalan Group
http://www.sbalanprojects.com/
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