RE: What Happened to PHP?

You are viewing a single comment's thread:

I simply believe in using the right framework for the right job.

It is a very reasonable position. Although it is surprising that many times humans are very unreasonable creatures. So you may find, with surprise, that some fan of a particular language or system attacks you for your choice of work on one or another platform or programming language.

I notice that a whale has taken to downvoting the articles in the Learn2Code tribe. When did programming become such a toxic subject?

In subjective matters, there may be no reasonable cause. It may even be personal and visceral antipathy against the topic, without there being any mentally valid reason to give a downvote.

Any way at all. I'm not a programmer, I just like to review the history of things a little, and I liked how you explained the situations and contexts in your post.


!GIF Good post!
Stay !ALIVE
!PGM !LUV !BBH



0
0
0.000
7 comments
avatar

@yintercept! You Are Alive so I just staked 0.1 $ALIVE to your account on behalf of @ pedrobrito2004. (2/10)

The tip has been paid for by the We Are Alive Tribe through the earnings on @alive.chat, feel free to swing by our daily chat any time you want, plus you can win Hive Power (2x 50 HP) and Alive Power (2x 500 AP) delegations (4 weeks), and Ecency Points (4x 50 EP), in our chat every day.

0
0
0.000
avatar
(Edited)

I'm not a programmer, I just like to review the history of things

The development of computer programming is one of the most fascinating subjects in history.

The systems created by programmers have had a tremendous impact on society.

One interesting aspect of programming is that accessible languages like BASIC, PHP and even JavaScript are routinely berated by the academic community.

It is an interesting question: Why does the academic community favor convoluted programming structures over easily accessible ones?

The LAMP stack was extremely popular in the early 2000s. The demise of the LAMP stack is an interesting area of study.

People keep using the LAMP stack despite the bad press given to it.

I can pound out extremely robust and secure web sites using PHP plus a relational database, but for some odd reason, people avoid the tech.

!PIZZA

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you for your witness vote!
Have a !BEER on me!
To Opt-Out of my witness beer program just comment STOP below

0
0
0.000