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Re: server-side vs.client-side [message #183526 is a reply to message #183521] Wed, 30 October 2013 00:54 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Jerry Stuckle is currently offline  Jerry Stuckle
Messages: 2598
Registered: September 2010
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Senior Member
On 10/29/2013 4:45 PM, Christoph Michael Becker wrote:
> Arno Welzel wrote:
>
>> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn, 2013-10-28 03:22:
>>
>>> Richard Damon wrote:
>>>
>>>> […] The one thing that is fairly certain is that the
>>>> player will almost certainly NOT be written in PHP,
>>>
>>> That much is true.
>>>
>>>> as PHP is normally a server side language, and few clients will understand
>>>> it.
>>>
>>> A common misconception. *No* programming language is “normally” either
>>> “server-side” or “client-side”.
>>
>> Historically PHP had *always* been targeted to be used on a server to
>> generate output for one or more clients delivered via HTTP. That's the
>> reason why there are modules for Apache, why PHP supports CGI and why
>> literally every book about PHP teaches how to create websites using PHP
>> and not how to build desktop applications using PHP.
>>
>> Just because it is technically possible to set up a PHP runtime
>> environment literally anywhere and <http://gtk.php.net/> exists it does
>> not make PHP a language which is also be used on "client side". BTW -
>> the last update of <http://gtk.php.net/> dates back to August 2010...
>>
>> The opposite is true for ECMAScript which is fact used "server side" and
>> "client side" as well also in real applications.
>>
>> But for sure you can name some popular PHP based desktop applications
>> that prove it wrong, that PHP is *usually* only used "server side" - can
>> you?
>
> It seems you're not taken into account command line applications, for
> which PHP is well suited.[1] These often run outside of any
> client-server context, such as phing and phpunit (which I am using
> "every" day), for instance.
>
> [1] <http://php.net/manual/en/features.commandline.php>
>

Sure, there are command line applications. But what percentage of the
PHP scripts out there fall into this case?

You're as bad as Pointed Head. You don't understand what the term
"Normal" means. Maybe you're in the same alternate universe he is.

--
==================
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Jerry Stuckle
JDS Computer Training Corp.
jstucklex(at)attglobal(dot)net
==================
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