I’m a full-time developer. I live to code and love to code. The first language I learned to code in was PHP ten plus years ago. This was back in the day when PHP was it for Server Side Scripts. PHP straight-up and hardcore. I was taught to write custom PHP code on the LAMP framework to accomplish anything that a script would need to perform outside of basic html. I spend my whole day, practically every single day, writing custom code enveloping my three absolute, cannot-leave-home-without essentials: HTML, CSS, and Javascript, with each creation calling jQuery and Ajax with a smidgen of AngularJS and NodeJS in the mix as well. I build custom websites perfected to the client’s vision of the design, of course. Based on the client’s requirements for the project (always obviously implied), I create Intellectual Property out of thin air. In turn my clients get websites that are aesthetically pleasing, satisfy, assuage, inform and entertain. I am of course referring to the PHP (back in the day) before the widespread acceptance and thereby incorporation of nebulous frameworks, such as JavaScript, jQuery, AJAX and AngularJS or NodeJS. I am referring to back when PHP was the only way to call objects/arrays from a database rendering output to the Server Side securely. Back in the day this was the only option, and the like as was with PHP, so was the only way for a “website” to store secure information was in a database. These limits that I briefly described are absolutely non-existent in today's coding. However even today, when I am confronted with an agonizingly, excruciatingly tenacious deadline by a client or a extremely intriquate, detailed, large request that requires hand coding, I instinctively turn to PHP. Instinctively and without hesitation from the back of the code in my brain, I know the capability of PHP and I start with this as my base (in most cases). This serves me extremely well, because when you are able to creatively combine the core authenticity of