Posts Tagged ‘PHP4’
PHP for Web Developers course starts soon
Written by Bean on January 3, 2009 – 8:43 amIts not too late to register for PHP 101 for Web Developers at LVS Online!
Learn how to use PHP4 or PHP5 to make your web site more dynamic and interactive. Utilize PHP to automate some of the more mundane tasks of your web site and prevent errors, all while creating a standards compliant web site.
We have changed the staffing of this course to provide a cooperative learning experience. This session of PHP 101 for Web Developers will have an assistant, an instructor and a back up instructor to help guide you through the assignments.
The online PHP classroom opens on Monday and the first lesson will be posted on 1/10/09. Registration ends soon!
Tags: Classes, PHP, PHP4, PHP5
Posted in Class Announcements, PHP | 2 Comments »
PHP Date Formats
Written by Bean on August 10, 2008 – 11:14 pmThe table below shows the characters that may be used in the format string.
Each character represents a part of the formatting.
| Character | Description |
|---|---|
| a | “am” or “pm” |
| A | “AM” or “PM” |
| B | Swatch Internet time (000-999) |
| d | Day of the month with a leading zero (01-31) |
| D | Three characters that represents the day of the week (Mon-Sun) |
| F | The full name of the month (January-December) |
| g | The hour in 12-hour format without a leading zero (1-12) |
| G | The hour in 24-hour format without a leading zero (0-23) |
| h | The hour in 12-hour format with a leading zero (01-12) |
| H | The hour in 24-hour format with a leading zero (00-23) |
| i | The minutes with a leading zero (00-59) |
| I | “1″ if the date is in daylights savings time, otherwise “0″ |
| j | Day of the month without a leading zero (1-31) |
| l | The full name of the day (Monday-Sunday) |
| L | “1″ if the year is a leap year, otherwise “0″ |
| m | The month as a number, with a leading zero (01-12) |
| M | Three letters that represents the name of the month (Jan-Dec) |
| n | The month as a number without a leading zero (1-12) |
| O | The difference to Greenwich time (GMT) in hours |
| r | An RFC 822 formatted date (e.g. “Tue, 10 Apr 2005 18:34:07 +0300″) |
| s | The seconds with a leading zero (00-59) |
| S | The English ordinal suffix for the day of the month (st, nd, rd orth) |
| t | The number of days in the given month (28-31) |
| T | The local time zone (e.g. “GMT”) |
| U | The number of seconds since the Unix Epoch (January 1 1970 00:00:00GMT) |
| w | The day of the week as a number (0-6, 0=Sunday) |
| W | ISO-8601 week number of year, weeks starting on Monday |
| Y | The year as a 4-digit number (e.g. 2003) |
| y | The year as a 2-digit number (e.g. 03) |
| z | The day of the year as a number (0-366) |
Tags: Dates, PHP4, PHP5, Reference
Posted in PHP, Reference | No Comments »
New PHP Class for Web Developers
Written by Bean on August 4, 2008 – 12:33 amWe are pleased to announce a new PHP class designed specifically for web developers. We have totally revamped the introductory PHP course at LVS Online. It was updated for PHP5 and to meet the needs of the aspiring web developer.
Here are some of the topics that we will be covering:
- What is PHP?
- Programming basics
- PHP syntax
- Variables
- Includes
- Built-in functions
- Computer logic
- Conditional Statements
- Formatting Data
- Loops
- Debugging PHP
- Separation of Concerns
- PHP forms and form handlers
- PHP mail function
- PHP security
- PHP database entry
- PHP displaying database data
- Customized pages
Registration closes on 8/27/08. Sign up at LVS Online today!
Tags: Classes, PHP4, PHP5
Posted in Class Announcements | 11 Comments »
