Course Locations

Annapolis, MD
Atlanta, GA
Boston, MA
Calgary, AB
Cedar Rapids, IA
Charleston, WV
Chicago, IL
Columbia, MD
Columbus, OH
Des Moines, IA
Detroit, MI
Indianapolis, IN
Kansas City, MO
Los Angeles, CA
Milwaukee, WI
Norfolk, VA
Ottawa, ON
Philadelphia, PA
Phoenix, AZ
Pittsburgh, PA
Raleigh-Durham, NC
Richmond, VA
San Francisco, CA
Seattle, WA
St Louis, MO
Toronto, ON
Wash Metro Area, DC

All Locations »

Popular Courses

Project Management, IT Service Management, .NET, SAS, Rexx, ASP, JavaScript, HTML, XML, ColdFusion, Visual Basic, COBOL, Assembler, Java, J2EE, Java Wireless, WebSphere, WebLogic, UNIX, LINUX, AIX, Solaris, z/OS, OS/390, CICS, IMS, VSAM, Easytrieve, AS/400, Oracle, BusinessObjects, SQL, DB2, Crystal Reports

Browse Courses

                          

About Us Software Consulting Training Home line

Introduction to PHP & mySQL for Non Programmers

Email this Page    Print-Friendly Version

Summary:
This class shows non-programmers who have some web coding experience how to create dynamic web pages that interact with a UNIX web server store data in a mySQL database. It includes basic syntax, built-in functions, and branching logic conditions. The emphasis of this class is to develop and validate web-based forms to pass data in and out of a database.

Duration:
4 Days/Lecture & Lab

Audience:
This course is designed for experienced HTML Web coders without programming experience.

Topics:

  • A Gentle Introduction to MySQL
  • PHP Overview
  • Language Syntax
  • Variables, expressions, and output
  • Adding Logic and Iteration to HTML Pages
  • Arrays
  • Interacting with the Operating System
  • Working with Forms
  • User-defined Functions
  • Forms & Sessions
  • Accessing MySQL
  • Enhancing the web page
  • Regular expressions

Prerequisites:
Students need to have knowledge of UNIX from a command line level (file permissions, directory/file management, using the vi editor or equivalent to post files on a web server) and experience programming in a programming language using logic statements, functions, and advanced variables. They must also know basic HTML coding, especially with FORMS.




Last Update: May 22, 2012