Perl vs. PHP
computing: software: Perl/PHP: Perl vs. PHP
Overview
Perl and PHP are often compared with each other, largely due to their mutual popularity for web site design. The general consensus seems to be that people use PHP because it was invented specifically for creating web pages, whereas Perl has a lot of other uses as well — or, in other words, people use PHP because they don't know any better, and people who know better use Perl.
Unfortunately, this apparently does nothing to prevent the use of PHP in such heavily-used, highly-developed applications as MediaWiki and Drupal.
Links
Object-Oriented Programming
object-oriented programming, or OOP, was a late addition to both languages, but it's a bit easier to use in PHP. (Perl's implementation may be more powerful, but it's not at all clear how.) A comparison:
characteristic | Perl | PHP |
---|---|---|
class files | one class per file | multiple classes per file |
class initialization code |
my $self = {}; $self->{FIELDNAME} = default; ... bless($self); return $self; |
$this->fieldname = default; |
initialization code within methods | my $self = shift; | none needed |
identifier within class code | $self->fieldname |
|
OOP Notes
- In class methods, the object itself is an implicit first argument; the shift function uses the @_ magic variable by default, effectively retrieving the object reference.
- The Perl bless function causes the package's functions to be bound into the hashref object (probably creates a VMT for it); without being blessed, the object is just a normal hashref.
- On the surface, PHP's identifier-within-class syntax seems more complicated, but it made intuitive sense to me (Woozle) except possibly for the issue of which identifiers get dollar-signs and which don't (which is even more complicated in Perl)... although I don't see why PHP needs both "this" and "self" when there's the "->" vs. "::" to disambiguate dynamic from static (but again, this is a minor annoyance and much less confusing than many aspects of Perl's OOP syntax).
- In Perl, any string inside delimiters (such as [], {}, ()) is assumed to be a string literal if it does not begin with $ and does not contain any delimiters. (This is a rough guess at the actual rules, which may be more complicated.) For this reason, some examples of class initialization show the field names without quotes, e.g. "$self->{FIELDNAME} = 'value';", which can be more understandably written as "$self->{'FIELDNAME'} = default;".
Notes
- PHP::Interpreter: a Perl module for running PHP code, thus making it easier to gracefully port a project from one to the other