Anything. PHP
is mainly focused on server-side scripting,
so you can do anything any other CGI program
can do, such as collect form data, generate
dynamic page content, or send and receive
cookies. But PHP can do much more.
There are
three main areas where PHP scripts are used.
-
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 webserver and a web browser.
You need to run the webserver, 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, visit
its own website.
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, Microsoft Internet Information
Server, Personal Web Server, Netscape and
iPlanet servers, Oreilly Website Pro server,
Caudium, Xitami, OmniHTTPd, and many others.
For the majority of the servers PHP has a
module, for the others supporting the CGI
standard, PHP can work 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, or a mixture of them.
Although not every standard OOP feature is
implemented in PHP 4, many code libraries
and large applications (including the PEAR
library) are written only using OOP code.
PHP 5 fixes the OOP related weaknesses of
PHP 4, and introduces a complete object
model.
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. The following
databases are currently supported:
Adabas D |
InterBase |
PostgreSQL |
dBase |
FrontBase |
SQLite |
Empress |
mSQL |
Solid |
FilePro (read-only) |
Direct MS-SQL |
Sybase |
Hyperwave |
MySQL |
Velocis |
IBM DB2 |
ODBC |
Unix dbm |
Informix |
Oracle (OCI7 and OCI8) |
|
Ingres |
Ovrimos |
|
We also have a DBX database
abstraction extension allowing you to
transparently use any database supported by
that extension. Additionally PHP supports
ODBC, the Open Database Connection standard,
so you can connect to any other database
supporting this world standard.
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. You can also
use our CORBA extension to access remote
objects.
PHP has
extremely useful text processing features,
from the POSIX Extended or Perl regular
expressions to parsing XML documents. For
parsing and accessing XML documents, PHP 4
supports the SAX and DOM standards, and you
can also use the XSLT extension to transform
XML documents. PHP 5 standardizes all the
XML extensions on the solid base of libxml2
and extends the feature set adding SimpleXML
and XMLReader support.
While using
PHP in the e-commerce field, you'll find the
Cybercash payment, CyberMUT, VeriSign
Payflow Pro and MCVE functions useful for
your online payment programs.
At last but
not least, we have many other interesting
extensions, the mnoGoSearch search engine
functions, the IRC Gateway functions, many
compression utilities (gzip, bz2), calendar
conversion, translation...
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.