show/hide this revision's text 2 Reworded a tad. I care :)

Most of these responses seem to be advocating what I would consider alternatives to PHP. Without meaning wishing to be rude to the other posters, what's the point of that? You have motivation to learn something new, so unless you're If you were planning to give up PHP, it would be fair enough. If you were wanting to move away from web dev, it would be fair enough. But, you have a job in web dev, and you presumably want to find something useful to scratch that 'something new' itch with. So, why not use that to learn something that you can use in conjunction with itPHP, something that'll be an addition, not an alternative?

Javascript would be the obvious choice, IMHO, for the benefit of being able to get your code off the server and into the browser when you need to.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Most of these responses seem to be advocating what I would consider alternatives to PHP. Without meaning to be rude, what's the point of that? You have motivation to learn something new, so unless you're planning to give up PHP, why not use that to learn something that you can use in conjunction with it?

Javascript would be the obvious choice, IMHO.