> Clueless people get obsessed with languages and frameworks. No matter what language and framework you use, you have to write your application code. If you use a fancy framework, then you have to write framework-compliant code in addition to your program’s code. With node.js, you’re fiddling around with callback functions and manually managing timing, instead of letting Apache and the OS do it for you.
@rdlowrey Just popped by to say that just because you don't understand how a language or framework works doesn't make you right :)
You're not 'manually managing timint' you're programming event based. Callbacks make more sense than sequential code for event based code, which is what you're writing in your api anyway.
@PeeHaa I'd argue that PHP4 was a breakthrough that changed the web forever :) PHP5 is a lot better but it's not a one size fit all, just like node.js isn't
@BenjaminGruenbaum The way you are saying that implies to me that you think that just because some new way of programming turned up it is bound to be good. That's not true
@BenjaminGruenbaum this has nothing to do with php developers not liking other languages. I'm a PHP developer and I like a lot of other languages. I like C++, I like Python, I like Haskell. I also like JavaScript. But still I think that the concept of using node.js for "real" applications is very fundamentally flawed
I think that's a no sense conversation. If navigators had some kind of internal PHP motor that we can talk about what language is better. It is impossible compare PHP with Js and Node because its about one motor vs two (almost).
@BenjaminGruenbaum Because of what @rdlowrey said. The callback-style programming is just forcing you to manually manage things that normal blocking calls give you for free. I really can't believe how people can think that those async APIs in any way improve your programming experience
@NikiC you tell your program what to do when something happens. Something can be a lot more than 'user enters php page'. That makes a lot more sense to me. Events.
@NikiC it manages the logic behind them poorly, context switches are expensive, node.js gives you more control. As do react, ruby event machine, and HttpAsync on C#
@BenjaminGruenbaum the cost of a context switch is a lot lower than the cost of the actual system call, usually. The costly part is actually reading a file or whatever, not the context switch to start doing that ;)
@PeeHaa No actually it will be good, I have realised that I missed a couple of obvious things in the first place, notably the read buffer should be an object and not just a dumb string and that messages != frames
I've been looking into node.js recently and wanted to see a true comparison of processing speed for PHP vs Node.js. In most of the comparisons I had seen, Node trounced Apache/PHP set ups handily. However all of the tests were small 'hello worlds' that would not accurately reflect any webpage's m...
Just because one app fires threads to do something and another runs in NUM_CPUS processes to begin with and doesn't start/stop new processes doesn't mean they can't be tested against each other
Apache/Nginx/whatever are general purpose extensible servers, the Node app is all in one with an embedded server. Of course Node will outperform the others, it's solving a totally different set of problems in a very specific way.
@DaveRandom I have a typical service that offers a REST api, it has to make one or several DB calls, maybe access a file, maybe perform some validation, maybe do very little logic and return an answer to the client.
My argument is a good environment to write that as long as you have a good understanding of asynchronous coding
WAY better than PHP, but that's a futile argument :)
What the app actually does isn't relevant, the point is that if you write it in Node you are writing an app that does exactly that in a very specific way, with the web server embedded. No insanely configuration process to fall through (yes Apache, I'm looking at you), no humungous routing table/vhost setup to traverse, just receive a request, process it and spit it out. Obviously that will be more performant, there's no bloat.
But at the same time, your app cannot do anything else unless you write the code to do it. It's not a couple of lines in a config file, its several hours/days/weeks/years of development.
user895378
(which may or may not end in a better solution than what's already been invented)
You're still focusing on the wrong part of this. It's not about what the app does, restful or no, it's about the number of mechanisms that are involved to make it all happen.
It's completely language and platform agnostic.
And ftr, I like Node. But it's not a magic bullet.