This book guides the reader through the entire process of setting up their own site using the open source AMP model. During the course of the book, several Web sites are created, with common themes, so that the reader may utilize these examples in the real world. The book is multi-platform, and will address installation and usage on both Linux and Windows and can be used as a reference for PHP, MySQL and Apache syntax, functions, and commands.
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 23.4 cm
Breite: 18.8 cm
Dicke: 38 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-7645-5744-6 (9780764557446)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Michael "BuzzLY" Glass has been a gladiator in the software/Web site development arena for more than eight years. He has more than ten years of commercial programming experience with a wide variety of technologies, including PHP, Java, Lotus Domino, and Vignette StoryServer. He divides his time between computer programming, playing pool in the APA, and running his Web site at www.ultimatespin.com. You can usually find him slinking around on the PHPBuilder.com forums, where he is a moderator with the nickname BuzzLY.
Yann "Bunkermaster" Le Scouarnec is the senior developer for Jolt Online Gaming, a British gaming company. He is a moderator at PHPBuilder.com and a developer of open source PHP software for the gaming community. He has also worked for major software corporations as a software quality expert.
Elizabeth Naramore has been programming with computers since a very young age, and, yes, she remembers when software was packaged on cassette tapes. Graduating from Miami University at age 20 with a degree in Organizational Behavior, she found a world of opportunity awaiting her--in corporate marketing. Her first love was always computers, however, and she found herself sucked back to the programming world in 1997 through Web site design and development (once a computer geek, always a computer geek). While she plans to return to Miami to get her Masters in Computer Science, she currently stays busy running several Web sites. Her main focus is in e-commerce and running www.giftsforengineers.com.
Elizabeth has spent the past six years developing Web sites and coordinating all phases of Web site publication and production. She is currently a moderator at PHPBuilder.com, an online help center for PHP. Her other interests include poetry, arts and crafts, camping, and juggling the many demands of career, family, and the "other duties as assigned" that come along in life. She lives in Cincinnati, Ohio, with her husband, beautiful daughter, and a new baby on the way.
Gary "trooper" Mailer. After graduation from university in 1998, Gary worked in a major software house in central London as a quality assurance engineer, and also as the departmental Web developer (using ASP). This gave him a taste of Web development. After a few years, he made the jump into full-time Web development and has not looked back since.
Gary has worked in a few different sectors, including communications (Siemens) and hotels (Hilton), as well as in "traditional" development houses.
He is currently a freelance developer for a European communications company. Gary has been and continues to be an active member of and contributor to the PHPBuilder.com site.
Jeremy "stolzboy" Stolz is a Web developer at Cloverfish Inc. (www.cloverfish.net), a Web development company in Fargo, North Dakota. Jeremy is primarily a PHP/MySQL developer, but he has also worked with many other languages. When not working, he frequents the Internet and tries to keep up his programming skills. He is a contributor to and moderator at PHPBuilder.com. He also frequents many other computer-related Web sites to keep his skills sharp and up to date.
Jason "goldbug" Gerner currently spends his days working as a Web developer in Cincinnati and burns free time complaining about lack of support for Web standards and abusing XML. He can often be found lurking in the PHPBuilder.com discussion forums, waiting to chime in with nagging comments about CSS or code efficiency.
Introduction; Part I: Getting Started; Chapter 1: Introduction and Installation Configuration; Part II: Movie Review Web Site; Chapter 2: Creating PHP Pages; Chapter 3: Using PHP with MySQL; Chapter 4: Using Tables to Display Data; Chapter 5: Form Elements: Letting the User Work with Data; Chapter 6: Letting the User Edit the Database; Chapter 7: Validating User Input; Chapter 8: Handling and Avoiding Errors; Part III: Comic Book Fan Site; Chapter 9: Building Databases; Chapter 10: E-mailing with PHP; Chapter 11: User Logins, Profiles, and Personalization; Chapter 12: Building a Content Management System; Chapter 13: Mailing Lists; Chapter 14: Online Selling: A Quick Way to E-Commerce; Chapter 15: Creating a Bulletin Board System; Part IV: Advanced Users; Chapter 16: Using Log Files to Improve Your Site; Chapter 17: Troubleshooting; Appendix A: Answers to Exercises; Appendix B: PHP Quick Reference; Appendix C: PHP Functions; Appendix D: MySQL Data Types; Appendix E: MySQL Quick Reference; Appendix F: Comparison of Text Editors; Appendix G: Choosing a Third-Party Host; Appendix H: An Introduction to PEAR; Appendix I: AMP Installation; Index.