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Full Discussion: Advice on pursuing a career
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Advice on pursuing a career Post 302185207 by era on Monday 14th of April 2008 01:15:15 PM
Old 04-14-2008
A couple other remarks, just to maybe help you look in other directions, too.

If you're comfortable with scripting languages and databases, there's a whole web business world full of incompetent people to impress. I don't think it would be very gratifying in the long run, but this is one of the areas where you don't necessarily need to be strong on C / systems programming, which is often otherwise a baseline requirement for Unix-y jobs. Personally I would not touch PHP, but of course, that's where a lot of the buzz is right now. Ruby on Rails might be more interesting, but I'm not too familiar with that.

And of course, there's a lot of "real" development shops doing real products on Linux or Unix. The ones I've been looking at tend to work on Internet appliances and stuff like that, where probably systems programming is an important skill, too; but in actual practice, from what I've heard, some of these shops mainly use Python in practice. (I guess Google, too?)
 

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PG_QUERY_PARAMS(3)														PG_QUERY_PARAMS(3)

pg_query_params  -  Submits  a command to the server and waits for the result, with the ability to pass parameters separately from the SQL command
text.

SYNOPSIS
resource pg_query_params ([resource $connection], string $query, array $params) DESCRIPTION
Submits a command to the server and waits for the result, with the ability to pass parameters separately from the SQL command text. pg_query_params(3) is like pg_query(3), but offers additional functionality: parameter values can be specified separately from the command string proper. pg_query_params(3) is supported only against PostgreSQL 7.4 or higher connections; it will fail when using earlier versions. If parameters are used, they are referred to in the $query string as $1, $2, etc. The same parameter may appear more than once in the $query; the same value will be used in that case. $params specifies the actual values of the parameters. A NULL value in this array means the corresponding parameter is SQL NULL. The primary advantage of pg_query_params(3) over pg_query(3) is that parameter values may be separated from the $query string, thus avoid- ing the need for tedious and error-prone quoting and escaping. Unlike pg_query(3), pg_query_params(3) allows at most one SQL command in the given string. (There can be semicolons in it, but not more than one nonempty command.) PARAMETERS
o $connection - PostgreSQL database connection resource. When $connection is not present, the default connection is used. The default connection is the last connection made by pg_connect(3) or pg_pconnect(3). o $query - The parameterized SQL statement. Must contain only a single statement. (multiple statements separated by semi-colons are not allowed.) If any parameters are used, they are referred to as $1, $2, etc. User-supplied values should always be passed as param- eters, not interpolated into the query string, where they form possible SQL injection attack vectors and introduce bugs when han- dling data containing quotes. If for some reason you cannot use a parameter, ensure that interpolated values are properly escaped. o $params - An array of parameter values to substitute for the $1, $2, etc. placeholders in the original prepared query string. The number of elements in the array must match the number of placeholders. Values intended for bytea fields are not supported as parameters. Use pg_escape_bytea(3) instead, or use the large object functions. RETURN VALUES
A query result resource on success or FALSE on failure. EXAMPLES
Example #1 Using pg_query_params(3) <?php // Connect to a database named "mary" $dbconn = pg_connect("dbname=mary"); // Find all shops named Joe's Widgets. Note that it is not necessary to // escape "Joe's Widgets" $result = pg_query_params($dbconn, 'SELECT * FROM shops WHERE name = $1', array("Joe's Widgets")); // Compare against just using pg_query $str = pg_escape_string("Joe's Widgets"); $result = pg_query($dbconn, "SELECT * FROM shops WHERE name = '{$str}'"); ?> SEE ALSO
pg_query(3). PHP Documentation Group PG_QUERY_PARAMS(3)
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