See http://peteryared.blogspot.com/2003/09/next-language.html. Peter Yared was formerly CTO for Sun's Application Server groups. He has rejected JSP/J2EE and is now advocating solutions such as PHP. Pretty damning, given Peter's background: " The Java API?s grow into a morass of inconsistent and incomprehensible API?s, even the most simple things proved to be very complicated. The vast majority of J2EE deployments (over 80% according to Gartner) are simply Servlet/JSP to JDBC applications. Basically HTML front-ends to relational databases. It is ironic that much of what makes Java complicated today is all of its numerous band-aid extensions, such as generics and JSP templates, which were added to make these types of simple applications easier to develop. " "John Holmes" <holmes072000@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:419F62EB.2040409@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Vikas Nanda wrote: > >> I just wanted to know what the advantages are of using php against jsp. >> My supervisor wants me to use jsp but I think that php might be > > better. Also can php code be easy reused like jsp? > > Why would you think such a thing? They both accomplish the same mission > using similar strategies. A competant JSP programmer is going to make a > better program than a newbie PHP programmer and vice versa. > > Which programming language do you know? What kind of hardware are you > using? How many programmers are on your team? What kind of program are you > developing? > > The question isn't as simple as JSP vs. PHP vs. .NET, etc, many other > things need to be taken into consideration, too. You may just have to > accept that JSP is a better solution in this instance. Or you may weigh > all of the above and decide it'd be stupid to not use PHP. > > -- > > ---John Holmes... > > Amazon Wishlist: www.amazon.com/o/registry/3BEXC84AB3A5E/ > > php|architect: The Magazine for PHP Professionals ? www.phparch.com -- PHP Database Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php