Boring web sites are static. Interesting web sites are dynamic. That is, their content changes. A giant static HTML page
listing the names, pictures, descriptions, and prices of all 1,000 products a company has for sale is hard to use and takes
forever to load. A dynamic web product catalog that lets you search and filter those products so you see only the six items
that meet your price and category criteria is more useful, faster, and much more likely to close a sale.
The PHP programming language makes it easy to build dynamic web sites. Whatever interactive excitement you want to
create—such as a product catalog, a blog, a photo album, or an event calendar—PHP is up to the task. And after reading
this book, you'll be up to the task of building that dynamic web site, too.
This book is for:
• A hobbyist who wants to create an interactive web site for himself, his family, or a nonprofit organization.
• A web site builder who wants to use the PHP setup provided by an ISP or hosting provider , Like Earthlink for internet provider , HalaSat too.
• A small business owner who wants to put her company on the Web.
• A page designer who wants to communicate better with her developer co-workers.
• A JavaScript whiz who wants to build server-side programs that complement her client-side code.
• A blogger or HTML jockey who wants to easily add dynamic features to her site.
• A Perl, ASP, or ColdFusion programmer who wants to get up to speed with PHP.
• Anybody who wants a straightforward, jargon-free introduction to one of the most popular programming languages
for building an interactive web site.
PHP's gentle learning curve and approachable syntax make it an ideal "gateway" language for the nontechnical web
professional. Learning PHP 5 is aimed at both this interested, intelligent, but not necessarily technical individual as well as
at programmers familiar with another language who want to learn PHP.
Aside from basic computer literacy (knowing how to type, moving files around, surfing the Web), the only assumption that
this book makes about you is that you're acquainted with HTML. You don't need to be an HTML master, but you should be
comfortable with the HTML tags that populate a basic web page such as <html>, <head>, <body>, <p>, <a>, and <br>. If
you're not familiar with HTML, read HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide, Fifth Edition, by Bill Kennedy and Chuck
Musciano (O'Reilly).
Now i'll leave you with downloading link from
Here
password for this book :
www.kut-friends.net