On Jan 13, 4:08 ¨Βν¬ ΚανεΘεςδναΌκανεσ®θεςδ®®®ΐηναιμ®γονχςοτεΊ
> [Note:  ¨Βαςτσ οζ τθισ νεσσαηχεςε ςενοφετο ναλε ιτ μεηαποστ®έ

>
> I've not played with PHP so I can't tell you much about that.
>

I work both with Ruby (for my own applications) and PHP (for my web
pages on the server of my university) and I must say that I am sorry I
must use PHP since the web server does not have the Ruby module
installed (and, of course, I cannot install it).  Although I did not
work with "Ruby on Rails", I feel confident to suggest you to stick
with Ruby (if you can).  Ruby design is much more "coherent" and it
implements quite well the "least surprise principle".  I cannot say
the same about PHP, although, I must admit, that maybe PHP has a good
amount of useful libraries (but I would bet that for most of them, you
can find the Ruby equivalent).

(please, PHP lovers, do not flame me! :-)