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Christos Argyropoulos, MD, PhD. (you know him here!) is our moderator for this virtual event, which is December 18th, 2024 - Perl's 37th birthday! At this event we will be announcing our Summer 2025 plans, which will include a 3rd Issue of the SPJ.

We have author 6 committments from some very exciting topics, but we want more! The Summer Issue has 8 authors and is nearly 150 pages. We are looking to double the number of authors, doubling the number of pages is going to be a stretch šŸ˜€.

Click here to submit your paper proposal.

Note:

In case this was not clear, I stated it so in this most recent post at BPO:

If you ever wanted to be a published Perl author, here is your chance - the Science Perl Journal issues have their own ISBNs, papers will be getting their own DOIs, and all contributors are listed as co-authors of the Issue in which they appear.

You may reach out to us on #science on irc . perl . org or on Dr. Adam Russell's very active and awesome, Perl Applications & Algorithms discord server.

submitted by /u/OODLER577
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Hello. I have the following program.

#!/usr/bin/perl sub print_user_input { my $input = <STDIN>; print $input; } sub mock_user_input { local *STDIN; open STDIN, '<', \"this is fake user input\n"; print_user_input(); } mock_user_input(); __END__ $ perl ./scratch.pl this is fake user input 

I have successfully used the pattern displayed in the mock_user_input subroutine to test some user interfacing code I have. However I cannot wrap my head around how this actually works. What exactly does *STDIN mean and why does it need to be localized? Why are we passing a string reference as the third argument to open here? A detailed explanation of this code would be helpful for me. Thanks in advance.

submitted by /u/nicholas_hubbard
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Guys, Perl is famous for backwards compatibility. What is the oldest bit of perl use that is still relevant that you have heard of?

submitted by /u/saiftynet
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SlapbirdAPM now generically supports DBI!Hey friends, a few weeks back we introduced SlapbirdAPM (an open-source Perl application performance monitor), and received some great feedback from the community!

Today we'd like to announce that you are now able to track DBI queries in your applications (only available for Dancer2 and Mojolicious for now), regardless of your database, ORM, etc. Here's what it looks like! You can see the dancer2 code that generated these queries here.

preview.redd.it/l2jvz1bne8nd1.…

This is just one of the many monitoring features provided by SlapbirdAPM, hopefully you find them as useful as we do! And a reminder we have a *forever* free tier available for everyone!

submitted by /u/ivan_linux
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Since the language formerly known as Perl 6 has officially gone off on its own, has there been any effort to implement a true Perl 5 successor?

In my opinion, Raku tried to do too much with the syntax itself, scaled Perl's flexibility to infinity, and made itself unusable.

Perl 5 does not need much for it to become a "modern" language. Instead of extending the flexibility of the syntax, the direction for Perl 6 should emphasize standardizing core utilities to facilitate integration with modern workflows.

- Package/module management and import/export could benefit from streamlining
- Stronger LSP and debug/error tooling (Rust has spoiled me)
- "Prettier" auto-formatting for source code (For those 30yo system scripts, you know the ones I mean)

What would be on your wishlist?

submitted by /u/J_Stach
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Mo utilities for email.

Changes for 0.02 - 2024-04-26T23:02:53+02:00

  • Add tests for error parameters.
  • Rewrite the tests so that the functional tests are first and then the errors.





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