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Re: server-side vs.client-side [message #183590 is a reply to message #183584] Fri, 01 November 2013 18:37 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
The Natural Philosoph is currently offline  The Natural Philosoph
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On 01/11/13 16:53, Michael Vilain wrote:
> 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.
>


Java is the one I've seen employed both sides almost equally,otherwise
what you say is broadly true. If we are talking browsers.

If we are talking generic custom client server apps, there are no real
restrictions on what you wrote either end in, beyond the ability of the
platform to support the code.




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


--
Ineptocracy

(in-ep-toc’-ra-cy) – a system of government where the least capable to
lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the
members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are
rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a
diminishing number of producers.
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