'PHP 5 Power Programming' Available for Download 28
OneSeventeen writes "As mentioned earlier on slashdot, the Bruce Perens Open Source series has expanded its selection with PHP 5 Power Programming. As with all of the books in this series, electronic copies are offered free of charge several months after its printed release. While it is always nice to have even more PHP books on the bookshelves, this has been officially released on the Bruce Perens' Open Source Series for download in the form of a 720 page PDF file. Better PHP programming is only 9.3MB away!"
Re:Why PDF? (Score:3, Informative)
There are 2 formats that I download almost constantly (reading academic papers) postscript and pdf.
Re:Why PDF? (Score:1)
Citeseer doesn't offer HTML, and many academic papers are difficult to find in that format. Mostly people pass around tex files and process them into whatever format is appropriate, since we don't want to process the tex, we pass around a nice looking PDF or PS.
As for benefits... eh, it looks the same to everyone who reads it. Essentially that's the benefit.
Re:Why PDF? (Score:1)
What we were thinking.
Let me go tell everyone to change real quick.
Re:Why PDF? (Score:2)
Take it down a notch man.
Shit, the guy published his book in PDF format, and gave it away, and every post on this topic has been about the fact that he did it as PDF (guess nobody gives a shit about PHP).
Ok, fine. Nobody uses PDF, but you need a PDF reader to get that book, and any academic paper out of citeseer.
Re:Why PDF? (Score:2)
I have seen very few academic papers put out as HTML.
I have seen very many put out as PDF.
People put their paper into TeX, and then pop out a PDF. They do this so it looks the same way it did in the journal in which it was published.
As for the benefit, that's the benefit, that's why the do it. I'm sorry that you don't think that it's a benefit. If I read 2 or 3 papers, it helps me to have a hard copy that I can write on with a pen and a highlighter
Re:Why PDF? (Score:1)
Re:Why PDF? (Score:3, Informative)
Bruce
Link (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yeah i really dont like PDF (Score:1)
It's not proprietary.
Re:Yeah i really dont like PDF (Score:3, Informative)
Bruce
But you do use proprietary software to do this (Score:1)
Re:But you do use proprietary software to do this (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:Yeah i really dont like PDF (Score:2)
Elitist idiot (Score:4, Insightful)
Part of being a good programmer is using the best tools for the job.
For many contracts, to act in the client's best interests, you have to build code that they can get up and running on a typical web hosting package. Practically all hosts offer PHP support. I have yet to see one offer Ruby support.
For many contracts, to act in the client's best interests, you have to develop something that other developers will be able to work on. This entails using commonplace languages like PHP, not obscure Japanese ones like Ruby.
Even if you hate the language, there are lots of reasons to pick PHP over Ruby. Posting comments like yours just gives the impression you are some student who likes to think you're better than everyone else because you've jumped on the latest trendy bandwagon. Grow up.
pdf reader for acrobat haters (Score:2)
Foxit reader [download.com]
PHP 5 Power Programming (Score:3, Funny)
Isn't it as simple as:
Chapter 1:
Use Perl
Index
Perl, 1
-Bill
Re:PHP 5 Power Programming (Score:1)
Isn't it as simple as:
Chapter 1:
People hate Perl = PHP
Index
PHP, 1
enlightened publisher (Score:4, Informative)