[PHP] char set ?

2013-09-07 Thread georg chambert
This Q is possibly rather HTML (is there a good list for that...)

anyways;
 Im in Sweden, and have done som pages with Swedish text, however our special 
(weird) characters åäö
comes out wrong when displayd in browser, would be nice if I could tag the text 
and keep the file as is rather
than changing the file format of the text (and encode the characters with some 
double/prefix notation, 
which I guess would be the main stream
anyone ?

regards
Georg

Re: [PHP] Re: PHP vs JAVA

2013-08-21 Thread georg chambert

Hi,

my I shake the subject a little; Ive been doing some PHP and found it ok 
to work with

not so much fuss, but that was PHP4, what about PHP5 ?
Dont really checked the difference but made a short-scan and found that it 
had be

screwed around with ?

Any think, should I change to 5 ?

BR georg

- Original Message - 
From: Tim Streater t...@clothears.org.uk

To: PHP List phpl...@arashidigital.com; php-general@lists.php.net
Sent: Wednesday, August 21, 2013 1:59 PM
Subject: [PHP] Re: PHP vs JAVA


On 20 Aug 2013 at 23:59, PHP List phpl...@arashidigital.com wrote:


While I don't have any references to back it up - my guess would be that
Java may be seen as more versatile in general programming terms.  A
staggering number of enterprise level web applications are built with
Java, add to that the possibility of writing Android apps with the same
knowledge.


To me the salient point is, does java has as extensive a library or set of 
interfaces to other packages (such as SQLite, mysql, etc)?



I would say that, in general, the other teacher is incorrect speaking
strictly in terms of web development.  PHP has already won that crown
many times over.  That said, when I was in University, it was difficult
to find a programming class that taught anything but Java - and that was
10yrs ago now.  I chalked it up to the education bubble not being able
to see what the rest of the world is actually doing.


Was PHP OOP-capable at the time? Perhaps the edu-bubble was simply looking 
down its nose at PHP. There being lots of courses proves nothing in and of 
itself. 20 years ago, there were lots of PC mags you could buy, which caused 
some folks to say look how much better the PC is supported than other 
platforms. Truth was, at the time, such support was needed given the mess 
of 640k limits, DOS, IRQs and the like, most of which issues have ceased to 
be relevant.


Anyway, why should one need a course to learn PHP, assuming you already know 
other languages. It's simple enough.


--
Cheers  --  Tim








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