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Re: server-side vs.client-side [message #183584 is a reply to message #183556] Fri, 01 November 2013 16:53 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Michael Vilain is currently offline  Michael Vilain
Messages: 88
Registered: September 2010
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In article <52721771(dot)6090201(at)arnowelzel(dot)de>,
Arno Welzel <usenet(at)arnowelzel(dot)de> wrote:

> Christoph Michael Becker, 2013-10-30 20:54:
>
>> Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>>
>>> One question - since both you and Thomas seem to be from Germany, and
>>> have the same misunderstanding of the word "normally", what does
>>> "normally" translate to in German? What does it mean?
>>
>> In Germany it is "normalerweise"/"üblicherweise", what means as much
>> usually. Anyway, a misunderstanding of the term "normally" is not the
>> problem here for me. In my opinion, it is correct to state: "PHP is
>> normally (usually, most often etc.) used on a server (for server-side
>> programming)."
>>
>> It is as well correct to state: "No programming language is normally
>> either server-side or client-side." Otherwise it would mean, that there
>> are programming languages that couldn't be used outside of a
>> client-server context.
>
> Exactly *this* is the wrong assumption, what "normally" means in this
> context. It does *NOT* mean that a language can *never* be used in other
> ways - it only says that is the the most common use of it.

I've never seen javascript run on anything but a browser. Unless
someone's developed a non-browser version, I personally consider it a
client-side scripting language. It's meant to control a browser and
nothing else, which is the client for web pages.

php is not intended to run on the browser. It runs on the server that
the browser talks to. It can run as part of the web-server or from the
command line. Same for perl, Java, python, ruby, or C. To me, that
makes them server-side programming languages.

I don't know if that matches other's definitions of server-side vs.
client-side, but that's my definition.

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