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Will learning PHP prevent me from switching to RoR later?
Greetings! In the process of learning PHP / MySQL, as well as the Zend Framework, the question arose, but will all this knowledge spoil my perception of Ruby on Rails in the future? My goal is to write a CMS (naturally for learning purposes) and I want to finish the job, but I'm not going to linger on PHP (although maybe in vain, I'm not sure). What say you experts?
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It will help in part: you will already know and be able to do something, but experience is never superfluous (almost never).
It will partly interfere: you will look at some conventions generally accepted for Ruby / Rails and be perplexed: "What kind of nonsense? And I'd rather drink it in my own way, as I did in the good old PHP." And this is the case when experience just happens to be superfluous. While this may not necessarily be the case, it is a possibility.
Is there any difference between driving a Zhiguli or driving a Volga? the main thing is to know traffic rules
. Probably, all the same, programming patterns are different there, as for me.
Complete the current project.
These technologies have a lot in common. the same areas of expertise. Even most of the tools are the same.
The main difference is the language and libraries.
and I want to finish the job, but I'm not going to linger on PHPIn fact, PHP has more applications, a much wider ecosystem. I wouldn't change the PHP ecosystem for the Ruby ecosystem.
Started - bring to the end, feel free to finish the CMS. Suddenly you don’t like RoR later and you decide to switch back to php))
1. Waste of time.
2. The horizon is expanding somewhat, but at the cost of a great loss of time.
3. The rest will not hurt.
4. If you have already decided about RoR, then why not start right away?
I will say that everything is individual. Pohape can make such an indelible impression on someone that other languages will no longer climb into them. In short - fortune-telling on coffee grounds.
I can say that the Yii framework is somewhat reminiscent of Ruby-on-rails. Maybe you should start with it so that the transition is easier.
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