In fact, a "bad" language require significantly more skill to use successfully and securely.
You seem to be passing this off as an advantage, but that doesn't make sense. Let's say you make furniture for a living, and one day you intentionally slice your arm off. Now you brag that having one arm is better than having two, since you now "require significantly more skill" to do the same work you could do before.
That doesn't make you a better furniture maker. It makes you a cripple.
Using PHP is the programming equivalent of cutting off your arm. It makes work more difficult, more painful, and slower.
You've really got a bad taste in your mouth regarding PHP. I'm sorry to hear that because it's just yet another tool. It only has to be as painful and slow as you make it when you use it. I hope you have a chance to revisit it sometime with a modern framework like Code Igniter or CakePHP. I used to have a shade of the type of biases you show now, but after we've made half a dozen MVC web apps using Code Igniter (and Django) I've had to change my tune.
I used to have a shade of the type of biases you show now, but after we've made half a dozen MVC web apps using Code Igniter (and Django) I've had to change my tune.
The possibility exists that you just don't know enough about programming to make an informed decision.
You seem to be passing this off as an advantage, but that doesn't make sense. Let's say you make furniture for a living, and one day you intentionally slice your arm off. Now you brag that having one arm is better than having two, since you now "require significantly more skill" to do the same work you could do before.
That doesn't make you a better furniture maker. It makes you a cripple.
Using PHP is the programming equivalent of cutting off your arm. It makes work more difficult, more painful, and slower.
But to each his own.