FUDforum
Fast Uncompromising Discussions. FUDforum will get your users talking.

Home » Imported messages » comp.lang.php » How do we manage large code sets in PHP?
Show: Today's Messages :: Polls :: Message Navigator
Return to the default flat view Create a new topic Submit Reply
Re: How do we manage large code sets in PHP? [message #169666 is a reply to message #169662] Wed, 22 September 2010 07:43 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
alvaro.NOSPAMTHANX is currently offline  alvaro.NOSPAMTHANX
Messages: 277
Registered: September 2010
Karma:
Senior Member
El 22/09/2010 2:27, Michael escribió/wrote:
> On Sep 21, 5:15 pm, Michael<MichaelDMcDonn...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> On Sep 21, 4:20 pm, The Natural Philosopher<t...@invalid.invalid>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Michael wrote:
>>>> In C/C++ we create manageable files and compile/link them together
>>>> into a single executable. What do we do in PHP?
>>
>>> Shit loads of includes.
>>> Or don't write major projects in it.
>>
>>> If you want to create a monster, create it as a php library, written in
>>> C or C++ (if you must)
>>
>>> PHP is BASIC, for web designers. The OSS answer to Visual Basic. It's a
>>> great little tool: A professional large project programming language? No.
>>
>> Thanks for your response. But if that's the case, (can't be used for
>> large programming projects), what do we use instead?
>
> Another follow-up comment... what I'd really like to do is handle the
> server side in C/C++. Is this possible?

Of course it is. Read about CGI.


--
-- http://alvaro.es - Álvaro G. Vicario - Burgos, Spain
-- Mi sitio sobre programación web: http://borrame.com
-- Mi web de humor satinado: http://www.demogracia.com
--
[Message index]
 
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Previous Topic: empty __FILE__ in quercus
Next Topic: Dynamic field names in recordset
Goto Forum:
  

-=] Back to Top [=-
[ Syndicate this forum (XML) ] [ RSS ]

Current Time: Thu Nov 28 23:36:05 GMT 2024

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.05093 seconds