- December 1 - (thread) While You're Waiting for Corinna
- December 2 - (thread) A Trio of Modules to Speed Up Your Web Applications!
- December 3 - (thread) Sleigh Bells and Custom Ops: A Jolly Journey with Ref::Util
- December 4
- December 5
- December 6
- December 7
- December 8
- December 9
- December 10
- December 11
- December 12
- December 13
- December 14
- December 15
- December 16
- December 17
- December 18
- December 19
- December 20
- December 21
- December 22
- December 23
- December 24
- December 25
submitted by /u/briandfoy
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was there ever a moment in history where they changed perl, then you either liked it, or got used to it, then they reverted the change, and now you reminisce about what iffs? what iff i could use that ex-feature `say"?now"`? (in the relative sense, because the absolute sense is also relative in accordance with the relative state formulation of quantum mechanics; this causes a paradoxical conundrum in temporal mechanics, and linguistic communication, to name an interdisciplinary couple) preparing for perl 7 was re preparing for def-alt (definitively alternate) defaults (unfaulted)
now i want a context-sensitive supersigil; where a single particular namespace collapses the symbolic waveform, otherwise it's like $ is a superposition between doubles, strings, undef, and whatnot (the next step is entangling variables, and functions; followed by syntax, and semantics; ending in real qubits, where we only know they are programmable matter, not what calculations they compute, but that's where quantum teleportation comes in, where we don't know where it comes from, because it's indistinguishable from the bootstrap paradox, because you need bugs to debug bugs)
submitted by /u/skul_and_fingerguns
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submitted by /u/OvidPerl [link] [comments] |
Prompt Engineering Is Not Dead
Many prompt engineering tricks are becoming a thing of the past, but there are still some areas where they shine.curtispoe.org
Announcing the presentation of the module Task::MemManager which facilitates the management of memory for multi-language applications. Will be discussing the module on Dec 18th https://mstdn.science/@ChristosArgyrop/113581044054775371 The presentation will include an application in which the same data was successfully processed in x86_64 Assembly, C and PDL. Surprisingly working with Assembly required the least amount of glue code (gulp).
(in the meantime you can find it in MetaCPAN)
submitted by /u/ReplacementSlight413
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