
reference: http://www.garmin.nl
shameless self pimp, I know, but hey, never hurts to spread the word
lol, small world. I work for the company that developped the VIND2 Productencatalogus (webbased system with which governments can maintain and publish the services/products they provide), which we integrated last year with the CMS made by Seneca (did the same with Brein, Centric and a few others). How do you know them?^misantropia^ wrote:PHP is much easier to learn than Perl. Especially if you've already done some heavy-duty Perl hacking, picking up and mastering PHP will take you mere weeks. Might be a good move because there are always PHP jobs available (demand > supply, at least in continental Europe).
@Eraser: you wouldn't happen to work for Seneca, do you?
Interesting, from just the random bits I've seen of PHP, I assumed it would be trickier than Perl. I certainly won't disagree with there being a greater demand for PHP monkeys than Perl though. Seems that everyone - in the corporate world at least - who isn't writing Microsoft stuff is doing PHP almost exclusively.^misantropia^ wrote:PHP is much easier to learn than Perl. Especially if you've already done some heavy-duty Perl hacking, picking up and mastering PHP will take you mere weeks. Might be a good move because there are always PHP jobs available (demand > supply, at least in continental Europe).
@Eraser: you wouldn't happen to work for Seneca, do you?
I dont quite have a resume. I am a self-thought PHP developer. Don't need anything big and difficult, just some side projects which I can finish in a few weeks. Maintenence work, small additions etc. Currently doing some freelance stuff but my current contract is not getting me quite the amount of paid hours I'd like.^misantropia^ wrote:What does your resume look like, dmmh?
no time m8Eraser wrote:Learn JSP and we could use you.
what ^misantropia^ said. assuming you're already familiar with html/css/js, php's a really handy thing to know and it's easy to learn, especially if you're coming from another language.R00k wrote:I've thought about learning PHP, but I've done so much in Perl already I don't see any reason to learn both. Granted, I don't do web dev for a living either. Aside from an internal data-driven site I wrote for our department, it's just a hobby, although I'm thinking about creating sites for a couple of small businesses that I've worked with before.
I just can't decide if I want to get into doing ongoing web support and updates or not. =\
Oh yea - and Java. heheFender wrote:umm... Java?
I hate to use this word, but thinking in OO is a paradigm shift. Before you get it, it is strange. After you get it, everything else seems clunky.R00k wrote:I've done function-oriented exclusively in Perl. I've done quite a bit of VBScript using WSH, but no object-oriented CGI before. It just seems somehow incongruent or weird to me.
So I should stop being an old fogey set in my ways, and just give it a chance?Fender wrote:I hate to use this word, but thinking in OO is a paradigm shift. Before you get it, it is strange. After you get it, everything else seems clunky.
That sounds like it would take up a lot of your time to learn and wouldn't have very many practical applications.^misantropia^ wrote:And just wait until you get to functional programming. Scheme, Haskell, Clojure, the fun never stops!
But then it's Monday morning again and you have to go back to your PHP/Java/C# day job.
No I don't. I work for Green Valley, a relatively small company (about 70 - 80 people work here). We are familiar with VIND2 though but the last two years or so we've been working with SDU and integrated their E-Grant product catalog into our system, but we still support VIND2.^misantropia^ wrote:@Eraser: you wouldn't happen to work for Seneca, do you?