Hello Travis,
Friday, May 7, 2004, 7:06:03 PM, you wrote:
TL> Hi Richard,
TL> Just curious...how do you do your profiling?
Zend IDE.
View the page in IE, click the Profile button, analyse the pretty
pie-charts and graphs and stack trace until I see where the bottle
necks are :)
--
Best regard
Hi Richard,
Just curious...how do you do your profiling?
cheers,
Travis
Richard Davey wrote:
Hello Ryan,
Friday, May 7, 2004, 4:51:45 PM, you wrote:
RA> Nearly all programs can be written in *one* very large .php file but just
RA> thinking of going back in to make changes 3 months down the ro
Ryan, et al --
...and then Ryan A said...
%
%
% On 5/7/2004 5:47:47 PM, Jay Blanchard ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
% wrote:
[snip]
Did you realize that you quoted Jay's quote of Paul's original note but
then snipped off Jay's comment? :-)
...
% If you are thinking only of performance this wont matter
Ok, thanks. I didn't think it would make a difference. And I agree,
splitting things up makes things a lot easier.
Thanks!
From: "Ryan A" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "Ryan A" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: [PHP] PHP Websi
On 5/7/2004 5:47:47 PM, Jay Blanchard ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> [snip]
> I have a question regarding website design with PHP. Is it better to
> have a
> single PHP script produce different content or have a separate PHP
> script
> for every action.
>
> For example, if an error occurs, should I
[snip]
I have a question regarding website design with PHP. Is it better to
have a
single PHP script produce different content or have a separate PHP
script
for every action.
For example, if an error occurs, should I have the same PHP script
produce
an error page or have a separate PHP script
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