- Server-side scripting. This is the most traditional and main target field for PHP. You need three things to make this work. The PHP parser (CGI or server module), a web server and a web browser. You need to run the web server, with a connected PHP installation. You can access the PHP program output with a web browser, viewing the PHP page through the server. All these can run on your home machine if you are just experimenting with PHP programming. See the installation instructions section for more information.
- Command line scripting. You can make a PHP script to run it without any server or browser. You only need the PHP parser to use it this way. This type of usage is ideal for scripts regularly executed using cron (on *nix or Linux) or Task Scheduler (on Windows). These scripts can also be used for simple text processing tasks. See the section about Command line usage of PHP for more information.
- Writing desktop applications. PHP is probably not the very best language to create a desktop application with a graphical user interface, but if you know PHP very well, and would like to use some advanced PHP features in your client-side applications you can also use PHP-GTK to write such programs. You also have the ability to write cross-platform applications this way. PHP-GTK is an extension to PHP, not available in the main distribution. If you are interested in PHP-GTK..
PHP can be used on all major operating systems, including
Linux, many Unix variants (including HP-UX, Solaris and OpenBSD),
Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, RISC OS, and probably others.
PHP has also support for most of the web servers today. This
includes Apache, IIS, and many others. And this includes any
web server that can utilize the FastCGI PHP binary, like lighttpd
and nginx. PHP works as either a module, or as a CGI processor.
So with PHP, you have the freedom of choosing an operating
system and a web server. Furthermore, you also have the choice
of using procedural programming or object oriented
programming (OOP), or a mixture of them both.
With PHP you are not limited to output HTML. PHP's abilities
includes outputting images, PDF files and even Flash movies
(using libswf and Ming) generated on the fly. You can also
output easily any text, such as XHTML and any other XML file.
PHP can autogenerate these files, and save them in the file
system, instead of printing it out, forming a server-side
cache for your dynamic content.
One of the strongest and most significant features in PHP is its
support for a wide range of databases.
Writing a database-enabled web page is incredibly simple using one of
the database specific extensions (e.g., for mysql),
or using an abstraction layer like PDO, or connect
to any database supporting the Open Database Connection standard via the
ODBC extension. Other databases may utilize
cURL or sockets,
like CouchDB.
PHP also has support for talking to other services using protocols
such as LDAP, IMAP, SNMP, NNTP, POP3, HTTP, COM (on Windows) and
countless others. You can also open raw network sockets and
interact using any other protocol. PHP has support for the WDDX
complex data exchange between virtually all Web programming
languages. Talking about interconnection, PHP has support for
instantiation of Java objects and using them transparently
as PHP objects.
PHP has useful text processing features,
which includes the Perl compatible regular expressions (PCRE),
and many extensions and tools to parse and access XML documents.
PHP standardizes all of the XML extensions on the solid base of libxml2,
and extends the feature set adding SimpleXML,
XMLReader and XMLWriter support.
And many other interesting extensions exist, which are categorized both
alphabetically and by category.
And there are additional PECL extensions that may or may not be documented
within the PHP manual itself, like » XDebug.
As you can see this page is not enough to list all
the features and benefits PHP can offer. Read on in
the sections about installing
PHP, and see the function
reference part for explanation of the extensions
mentioned here.
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