what modules shipped with versions of perl
Changes for 5.20240320
- Updated for v5.39.9
Mapping Perl releases on CPAN to the location of the tarballs
Changes for 5.20240320
- Change: f7e0bee4932f14f630ebd92ea809f1924d2771bb Author: Chris 'BinGOs' Williams <chris@bingosnet.co.uk> Date : 2024-03-20 16:29:41 +0000
[link] [comments]
Hackathon Perl / Open Food Facts in Paris
2024-03-23T09:00:00Z (UTC)→2024-03-24T17:00:00Z (UTC) Open Food Facts, 3 avenue victoria, 79004 Paris English below French En association avec les mongueurs, nous proposons d’organiser un Hackathon (marathon de programmation) autour de l’utilisat…Open Food Facts Forum
Hello everyone, I'm new to Perl and I'm currently writing a script to handle a repeated call of a sequence of commands (currently using the ` operator to evaluate them) to generate a dataset. As the generation takes a lot of time, i would like to find a way to do a clean interrupt in the middle in case I need to shutdown, so I set up a sigint handler to exit the loop. However, the Sigint also interrupts the command and I would like to avoid that. Since I don't really have control over the command's code, is there a way to block the sigint from Perl to prevent it from reaching the evaluating command?
submitted by /u/P1G4ME
[link] [comments]
So, I was imagining some sort of debug thingy, where one would insert debug commands into code, like with two ##es like critic or even straight Perl as with Data::Printer. But these wouldn't render on stderr but to another output. A tmux layout on another shell would then listen to these output and display whatever comes from the executing code. Like some kind of display socket.
It would render in a log like way, but also tui like, say htop, kind. How, in gross terms, and with which libs, could this be done?
submitted by /u/fellowsnaketeaser
[link] [comments]
submitted by /u/davorg [link] [comments] |
Pointless personal side projects - Perl Hacks
I can’t be the only programmer who does this. You’re looking for an online service to fill some need in your life. You look at three or four competing products and they all get close but none of them do everything you want.Dave Cross (Perl Hacks)
[link] [comments]
(cdlxxxvi) 15 great CPAN modules released last week
Updates for great CPAN modules released last week. A module is considered great if its favorites count is greater or equal than 12. CGI...niceperl.blogspot.com
Reading sequences from fasta foramt alignment by Bio::Perl
Perl Weekly Challenge 258: Count Even Digits Numbers
So hear me out...
This idea is stupid. But on Star Trek (VOY, TNG, and DS9 at least), they measured their data as "quads". ( https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Quad ). This was never defined because it's just Sci-Fi and doesn't need a real definition. But... what if they're quad-floats aka 128bit floating point values. This would mean then that all the storage could be done as LLM or other neural network style models, and vector embeddings and such. Given what we've got today with transformer style models for doing translation, chat, etc. If you had ultrapowerful computers that could do these calculations with such gigantic precision then you'd be able to store very accurate data and transform it back and forth from vector embeddings and other fancy structures. It'd enable very powerful searches, and the kind of analysis we're trying to use LLMs for and see them use in the shows when talking to the computers. This would also explain a lot about the universal translators from ENG onward, and could even help make sense of Darmok and Jalad at Tenagra. And then Voyager even has bio-neural circuitry for doing things faster, some kind of organic analog computing doing stuff "at the edge". Using weights and embeddings to do things with them and have them react by programming them with a machine learning model at each node could easily explain how that could work too.
This idea honestly feels too stupid to be real but it could explain so much.
Quad
A quad was a measurement of information storage in Federation computers. While Federation computers used binary code in some capacity, they also are known to have used trinary code.Contributors to Memory Alpha (Fandom, Inc.)
Recordings of the German Perl Workshop (gpw2023) are online
Config::Tiny V 2.30 supports keys with arrays as values
Perl.social server upgrades
Idle Thoughts on Old Perl Versions for New Distributions
perlbot and related status
Perl.social updates
Webservice to connect to Onfido API
Changes for 0.006 - 2023-07-02T15:36:03+00:00
- Add hook
Open a file for shared reading and/or writing
Changes for 4.05 - 2023-07-02
- Fix tests with perl-5.38.0.
Ryan Voots
in reply to Ryan Voots • •