PHP 6 and MySQL 5 for Dynamic Web Sites: Visual QuickPro Guide |  | Author: Larry Ullman Publisher: Peachpit Press Category: Book
List Price: $44.99 Buy New: $20.74 as of 9/9/2010 03:44 CDT details You Save: $24.25 (54%)
New (38) Used (20) from $18.95
Seller: new_books_today Rating: 158 reviews Sales Rank: 9400
Media: Paperback Pages: 648 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 7 x 1.4
ISBN: 032152599X Dewey Decimal Number: 005.133 EAN: 9780321525994 ASIN: 032152599X
Publication Date: December 29, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
| |
| Features:
| • | ISBN13: 9780321525994 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description It hasn't taken Web developers long to discover that when it comes to creating dynamic, database-driven Web sites, MySQL and PHP provide a winning open source combination. Add this book to the mix, and there's no limit to the powerful, interactive Web sites that developers can create. With step-by-step instructions, complete scripts, and expert tips to guide readers, veteran author and database designer Larry Ullman gets right down to business: After grounding readers with separate discussions of first the scripting language (PHP) and then the database program (MySQL), he goes on to cover security, sessions and cookies, and using additional Web tools, with several sections devoted to creating sample applications. This guide is indispensable for intermediate- to advanced level Web designers who want to replace their static sites with something dynamic. In this edition, the bulk of the new material covers the latest versions of both technologies: PHP 6 (due out in 2008) and MySQL 5 (available now). The book's publication date is likely to beat the official release of PHP 6, making it one of the first books available on the subject.
|
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 158
New Edition is Available September 15, 2005 Larry Ullman (Washington, DC) 136 out of 138 found this review helpful
As the author of the book, I regret having to do this (submit a review) but it seems to be the most immediate and effective way to correct a misunderstanding. The first edition of the book is based upon PHP 4 and came out in 2003. The second edition came out in 2005 and covers PHP 5. So, the book HAS been updated, despite what other reviews incorrectly state. Just click on "All Editions" under "Product Details" to find the most recent edition of this (or any) book.
[...]
Thanks,
Larry
BUY THIS BOOK! It's worth 50 STARS (if not more!) February 8, 2004 485 out of 512 found this review helpful
This book is, to say the very least, the finest computer book I have read in a very, very long time. I have spent the last three months trying to learn how to use PHP and MySQL to build a website with a simple content management system, however, due to the grossly unethical practice that publishing companies have of releasing books that are filled with editing and other errors, along with authors who are completely unable to write even a simple complete sentence that may be understood by their readers, I had nearly given up. Specifically, I have already WASTED money on the following books:
Creating Interactive Websites with PHP and Web Services by Eric Rosebrock - this book crashes around page 100 - it COULD have been a good book but is filled with errors that make it unusable. The publisher, Sybex, refuses to publish a real errata sheet and the book is NOT supported on the author's web site. Isn't that nice?
PHP MySQL Website Programming: Problem - Design - Solution by Chris Lea, Mike Buzzard, Jessey White-Cinis, and Dilip Thomas. Good luck if you can get past page 30! Considering this book has been out for some time, there is NO REAL support or errata sheet for it. The "sample site" that one is allegedly able to build by working through this book is filled with questions such as "Has anyone made it all the way to the end of this book?" Need I say more? What a joke.
MySQL/PHP Database Applications, SECOND EDITION. Gosh, considering this is the SECOND edition of this book, one might think an errata sheet and other help might be available. Forget that though - Wiley gets your money, you get plastered with errors so you can't get through the book.
PHP and MySQL Web Development by Luke Welling and Laura - Another USELESS second edition. Not only does the code in this book NOT WORK but the examples that you can download doesn't match what's in the book! Not only that but, as to be expected, there is no errata sheet and the authors web site that is allegedly there to "support" this book has nothing but an advertisement for it with the promise that the "site is under development." Wonder if it will ever be "developed."
As noted, ALL of the books above are USELESS. On a fluke, I decide to try one more - Larry Ullman's PHP and MySQL for Dynamic Web Sites by Peachpit Press. While a second edition is allegedly going to be released soon: I have the first edition. To be honest, I was ABSOLUTELY AMAZED that:
1. The code in this book WORKS!
2. The book is SUPPORTED by both the publisher and the author. The author's support site for the book actually contains an extensive list of errata for the very minor errors in it (unlike ALL of the books listed above which DON'T have an errata list). Furthermore, I haven't needed to check the errata because the errors in this book are so minor.
3. The author actually ANSWERS questions to problems on his site.
4. The author is capable of explaining everything, very clearly, and yet conveys a LOT of great information.
5. This book is CHEAPER than all of the ones listed above (and yet it is the ONLY one worth spending your money on).
I have been completely feed up with the incompetent and unethical practices of so many book publishers that I was beginning to wonder if there were ANY books that really taught you how to create a dynamic website. Well, there's one - Peachpit Press. No, I don't work for them and don't know the author - I'm merely a DISGUSTED customer who is tired of spending money on useless books.
RUN, don't walk to buy this book. You will be very, very glad you did.
Good Tutorial June 5, 2003 Sherman E. Wilcox (Albuquerque, NM USA) 126 out of 129 found this review helpful
I'm a newbie to both PHP and MySQL on Mac OS X. I'm learning from this book and from the PHP/MySQL for Dummies. This is the better book. It has lots of good information, clear writing, and easy to follow tutorials. The graphic display of PHP code is very easy to follow: as the author modifies scripts to teach new concepts, the new code is presented in red in the code listings. In just a few days I've gone from knowing nothing about PHP and MySQL to writing my own PHP code. If you're trying to learn how to use PHP and MySQL this is the book to get (along with the MySQL users manual).
Excellent book!! March 20, 2004 Kamran Vighio (Karachi, Pakistan.) 29 out of 29 found this review helpful
This is an excellent book. This book teaches what it claims to teach amazingly well. Well done Mr. Larry.And u know what? Larry Ullman also answers all your questions on the book's website. If u get stuck even on your first PHP script, Larry will personally help you in the forums. Now this is not what we normally get. A great book and FREE support on the website by the AUTHOR himself!!! WOW!! Amazon should give him Book of the Year award along with Julie Meloni's "PHP Essentials". If you are completely new to programming and you only know HTML and CSS and want to learn PHP (along with MySQL), "PHP Essentials" by Julie Meloni is the best book. If you have some basic programming experience like JavaScript or C or any similar language, then Larry's "PHP and MySQL for Dynamic Web Sites: Visual QuickPro Guide" IS THE BOOK FOR YOU!!!. This book does not teaches you the very basics of programming so if you are inexperienced in programming, get Julie's book... If u know a little programming, get Larry's book. Just excellent book.
Exactly what I needed to get started, and then some October 1, 2004 Jonathan Leathwood 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
I took this book out of the bookshop in the same bag as what looked like its obvious competitor on the shelf, 'PHP and MySQL for Dummies'. It is Larry Ullman's book that I am going through seriously, dipping into 'Dummies' (which is a good book) for an alternative explanation here and there. Whereas 'Dummies' starts with MySQL, Larry begins with some PHP basics before delving into the database, and this made more intuitive sense to me, since there were many things I wanted to do on my site (such as make an emailing form and add a readers' comments facility) with PHP before starting to think about what I could do with a MySQL database.
Notwithstanding the comments of one or two other reviewers, I have no experience of programming in any language, and yet I found this book started in the right place for me. What really made it valuable is that every concept is demonstrated right away in a real example that you can try out yourself and invent variants on to see the difference. This helps to sort out all the stupid questions and confusions that an expert probably can't even imagine your having.
Apart from Unix commands in the appendix on installation, there is not a single example in the book of something that has to be typed in 'on faith' (not quite true of the 'Dummies' book, though almost). In every chapter you are told what to type, what it does and why. Larry does move fast, and I had to puzzle over his explanation of database design and normalisation, along with his initial explanation of getting data output from the database in PHP. But this is only another strength of the book. He doesn't cut corners but he does ask you to think and not skip over too much.
Like some other people here, I have been to the book's website and forum and asked a question, and like them, I got a useful answer straight from the author. I will definitely choose his books again, and have a good feeling about Peachpit's Visual QuickPro/QuickStart books in general.
The design is equally well done. The fact that every script is shown both as an illustration and as annotated text makes the book much thicker than it might have been, but it is useful to see the script on its own and explanations (even if sidenotes to the script would have achieved both purposes, surely). The Comic sanserif used to show code is far better for long-distance reading than the monospaced font used in 'Dummies', and colour is used very effectively. I feel lucky I found this book!
Showing reviews 1-5 of 158
|
|
|