Hello,
We are starting a new project, one that will be used for production and
should be supported for years.
We need to access mysql via php
currently i seem to preffer PDO as it supports not only mysql but many
other DBs.
searching the net, i see many comparisons of mysql vs mysqli vs pdo.
Hi Erez,
From PHP 5.4 the default for all the mysql extensions family is mysqlnd
(PHP native mysql driver), and it seems that for the next PHP release (5.5)
ext/mysql will be deprecated https://wiki.php.net/rfc/mysql_deprecation
So PDO is probably the right answer.
Kaplan
On Sun, Dec 2, 2012
Personally I like PDO a lot.
mysql_ should definitely be avoided, but as far as I always understood
mysqli_ is the alternative to PDO for those people who don't like
Object oriented stuff...
PDO is afaik an official part of php and the recommended way to
interact with a db so I have a hard time
Thank you all for your replies
I'll probably stick with PDO
another short question:
anybody knows of a good PHP IDE (on linux of course) ?
On Sun, Dec 2, 2012 at 11:22 AM, Erez D erez0...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
We are starting a new project, one that will be used for production and
hello,
I have a question about process states:
I have this simplified code which I run under gdb.
#include stdio.h
int main()
{
int i;
for(i=0; i 10; i++)
printf(Hello, world!\n);
pause();
return 0;
}
I build on x86_64 (fedora 17) with gcc -g hello.c -o hello.
And then:
gdb --quiet
Hi Dan,
On Sun, Dec 02, 2012 at 02:57:30PM +0200, Dan Shimshoni wrote:
[...]
Starting program: /work/dev/t/sec/hello
Breakpoint 1, main () at hello.c:7
7 for(i=0; i 10; i++)
Missing separate debuginfos, use: debuginfo-install glibc-2.15-58.fc17.x86_64
(gdb)
Now with ps aux | grep