https://www.perl.com/article/197/2015/10/6/Display-real-time-data-with-Curses/
I came across this article by Mr d F and it piqued my curiosity about the curses and ncurses ecosystem.
Among the more ambitious projects that I have found, there is an attempt to implement vi in Perl:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/vip/
Spoiler: It still runs, Perl is awesome. ^_^
Does anyone else have a success to share about using Perl with curses/ncurses?
submitted by /u/singe
[link] [comments]
[link] [comments]
Flavio Glock On Perl, Java, Compilers And Virtual Machines
Programming book reviews, programming tutorials,programming news, C#, Ruby, Python,C, C++, PHP, Visual Basic, Computer book reviews, computer history, programming history, joomla, theory, spreadsheets and more.www.i-programmer.info
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 😀.
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
[link] [comments]
Join the Perl Applications & Algorithms Discord Server!
Check out the Perl Applications & Algorithms community on Discord - hang out with 66 other members and enjoy free voice and text chat.Discord
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
[link] [comments]