Difference between revisions of "Perl"

from HTYP, the free directory anyone can edit if they can prove to me that they're not a spambot
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(→‎Other: postmodern computer language)
(→‎Reference: profiling)
Line 16: Line 16:
 
* {{wikipedia|Perl}}
 
* {{wikipedia|Perl}}
 
* [http://www.cpan.org/ CPAN]: documentation links at the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network
 
* [http://www.cpan.org/ CPAN]: documentation links at the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network
 +
===Tutorials===
 +
* [http://perladvent.pm.org/2006/1/ Good things come in small packages]: the standard profiler and a new line-by-line profiler
 +
 
===Other===
 
===Other===
 
* [http://feather.perl6.nl:8080/cgi-bin/runpugs? PUGS], the Perl6 User's Golfing System: online simulation of Perl6
 
* [http://feather.perl6.nl:8080/cgi-bin/runpugs? PUGS], the Perl6 User's Golfing System: online simulation of Perl6

Revision as of 23:59, 27 December 2006

computing: software: programming: Perl

This is a growing seedling article. You can help HTYP by watering it.

Overview

Perl is a programming language widely used for web sites and Linux servers. It can be somewhat baffling to the eye – largely due to the frequent use of regular expressions – but due to its popularity it has been greatly refined and there is a large base of existing code available for reuse.

Articles

Usage

Design

Links

Reference

Tutorials

Other

Libraries and Modules

  • Collections:
    • CPAN: search the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network
  • Frequently-used libraries:
    • Perl DBI: database interface
    • Moose: an improved OOP module for Perl5 (Perl6 has better OOP built in)
  • Frameworks

Notes

  • Although single-quoted strings are widely cited as not interpreting anything, you do have to backslash certain characters if you want them represented literally:
    • the single-quote itself ( \' )
    • period ( \. )
  • One of the reasons for PHP's popularity over Perl for developing web applications is that it prints errors to the web browser, rather than simply quitting abruptly (causing either an incomplete page or, more likely, a 5xx Server Error). Perl does not do this by default. It is, however, quite easy to make this happen, by including the following line of code near the beginning of a program:
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser);
  • Although there is apparently no formal block-quote syntax (like /* */ in c/c++), a syntax used for documentation seems to accomplish the same thing. It's not presently known whether this is documented anywhere. "=anystring", at the beginning of a line, starts a block comment, and "=cut" at the beginning of a line ends the comment. This has not been tested thoroughly, but the exact string "cut" does seem to be necessary. Example:
regular_code_here();
==something
This part is commented, i.e. ignored by the parser.
Anything up until the "cut" line.
==cut
more_code();