Skip to comments.
A couple of questions for all FR Webheads
Posted on 12/12/2001 6:59:04 AM PST by Loyalty_and_Courage
Hi all, just what to pick the brains of all you webmasters out there to see what are the newest trends in website development. Just some quick questions
1. What your language of choice for programming cgi interaction? What makes it your choice?
2. What are your favorite websites for resources on the language above?
3. What (if any) site management software do you use for your website?
4. Do you use a DMS for your site? If so what DMS do you use, and would you recommend its use to others?
TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS:
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-29 next last
Thanks for the info!
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
What is your billing address? ;)
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
I use Notepad and sometimes perl :)
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
BTW PERL is free, not hard to learn, and extremely powerful. If your using it on a windows system use the version from Activestate.
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
I would definitely use ASP.NET and C# as your language. It is new, it is more powerful than anything else out there, and it separates the page logic from the presentation. For what it's worth...
5
posted on
12/12/2001 7:20:57 AM PST
by
wireplay
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
6
posted on
12/12/2001 7:23:33 AM PST
by
smith288
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
One other thing. I wouldn't use cgi. It is dated and doesn't scale well. If you do use cgi, perl is as good as it gets.
7
posted on
12/12/2001 7:24:03 AM PST
by
wireplay
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
Whatever you do, do not use Windows to serve a web site! Stick with UNIX and perl. With Linux or BSD, you can recycle x86 hardware for a server. Unless you are handling 1,000,000 page views per day, an average 500Mhz Intel PC with Linux as the OS, Apache as the http daemon and using perl for cgi is just fine. It will cost you $0 compared to the $$$ you will be spending with Microsoft. UNIX is not so hard to master, Apple is even using it in their Mac OS X (based on BSD). The best part of Linux on the server and Perl is the millions of web sites out there with information to help you out -- free of charge.
8
posted on
12/12/2001 7:26:26 AM PST
by
toupsie
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
9
posted on
12/12/2001 7:36:06 AM PST
by
Spruce
To: Spruce
10
posted on
12/12/2001 7:38:16 AM PST
by
Spruce
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
My host for the past 6 months is
NetCR.com and I'm very happy. The cost is very reasonable, and the uptime is phenomenal.
Disclaimer: I am only a satisfied customer.
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
1. What your language of choice for programming cgi interaction? What makes it your choice? Perl is interesting, but the syntax is too weird. I prefer PHP. It's a free download, and it's included with many Linux/Apache distributions. PHP is a popular choice for many web sites.
It's easy to learn, and it executes efficiently. It's sort of the best parts of several languages (C, Perl, etc.) The PHP scripts can be embedded right in the HTML, or contained in separate files.
It has several extensions for operating with databases (MySQL, Postgres, ODBC, Oracle, etc.), network sockets and protocol interfaces (like cURL to fetch web pages from other sites), gd (generates dynamic graphic content in PNG and JPEG format), Perl regular expressions, e-mail functions, forms handling, and the list goes on and on.
The documentation is excellent.
Here is a sample web page with a simple PHP script embedded to demostrate how it works:
<HTML>
<BODY>
<?php
print("Hello World");
?>
</BODY>
</HTML>
When you access the page from your web browser, the server executes the PHP script and generates a page that says "Hello World".
12
posted on
12/12/2001 7:52:21 AM PST
by
HAL9000
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
Just keep in mind with the free software that everyone seems to espouse (perl, php, apache, etc.): you get what you pay for. There are very cool things you can do under asp.net that are not easily done (or doable) under apache and perl. Plus visual.studios.net is drag-and-drop web forms. heck you can even use perl under visual.studios .net. for what it's worth...
13
posted on
12/12/2001 8:00:28 AM PST
by
wireplay
To: HAL9000
Perl is interesting, but the syntax is too weird. I prefer PHP. It's a free download, and it's included with many Linux/Apache distributions. PHP is a popular choice for many web sites. I agree wholeheartedly. PHP is quite robust, and can interact with several major database servers. Great documentation, its fast, and its free. Set it up on a Linux server and couple it with a MySQL database server and you've got a nice, robust server at no cost, other than the hardware. Perl is no match for PHP in the speed department.
I also use Cold Fusion in my current job. It's a bit slower, a lot more expensive, but very easy to learn, which of course makes it not nearly as powerful.
To: wireplay
There are very cool things you can do under asp.net that are not easily done (or doable) under apache and perl. Yeah, like putting more money in Bill Gate's wallet, or spreading NIMDA worms.
15
posted on
12/12/2001 8:13:23 AM PST
by
HAL9000
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
Language: PHP. Info: php.net Site management: Ftp Voyager :) DMS: myinternet.com. Recommend? Yes.
The FR Network site is written in PHP. |
To: HAL9000
You know what: capitalism works. I don't begrudge MS its money because their products work and they work together. There are issues, granted, but MS products are far easier to work with than the unix variants. However, I see the place for linux and perl. Too bad that the open source cult cannot see any place for true commercial software.
17
posted on
12/12/2001 8:19:59 AM PST
by
wireplay
To: wireplay
Yep, Microsoft produces the best virus delivery device money can buy. Spend all of your time downloading patches, not developing a web site.
18
posted on
12/12/2001 8:25:12 AM PST
by
AlKipple
To: Loyalty_and_Courage
just checked dice.com to see 'in demand' skills. asp had over 900 jobs, php had 76. That gives you some idea if your goal is to move your career forward. You can do your own checking on the other technologies.
19
posted on
12/12/2001 8:26:37 AM PST
by
wireplay
To: wireplay
You know what: capitalism works. One of my goals as a capitalist is to keep as much of the money as possible myself.
If I don't have to send it to Bill Gates, that's okay.
20
posted on
12/12/2001 8:33:21 AM PST
by
HAL9000
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-29 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson