Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Why is Perl dangerous on the server?
Why is the latter often disabled by default on shared hostings with PHP and Perl support "for security reasons"?
I do not know PHP very well, and I have an even more superficial understanding of Perl, but, in my opinion, these are languages \u200b\u200bthat have approximately the same capabilities: PHP (if you do not take it into account as a preprocessor) is Perl, slightly cleared of unjustified for the language complexity scenarios (let's compare the work with multidimensional arrays).
Why is Perl more dangerous?
PS The question was asked for a better understanding of the possibilities of the language and the expediency of studying it: or does it really provide more opportunities for using server resources, perhaps not by itself, but because of the way it is installed into the system; or it is more likely to make an unintentional error or miss someone else's malicious code.
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
and Perl is the latter often disabled by default "for security reasons"?
The language just didn't survive the competition: it's fine on its own, but the alternatives in the form of PHP, Ruby, Python, and JS are better.
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question