Database Programming with Perl
An Embarrassing Confession I’d like to think that I’m a reasonably decent Perl programmer now. I’d like to think that I have a good grasp of how to solve relatively common problems in Perl. But, you know, it hasn’t…
An Embarrassing Confession I’d like to think that I’m a reasonably decent Perl programmer now. I’d like to think that I have a good grasp of how to solve relatively common problems in Perl. But, you know, it hasn’t…
Lumme! Another week, another summary. Every week (almost) we start with the perl6-internals list, so here goes. An Evil task for the interested Our Glorious Leader, Dan Sugalski, last week asked for volunteers to work on making ordered destruction…
James D. Tisdall is the author of the recently released Mastering Perl for Bioinformatics. In my previous article, A Chromosome at a Time with Perl, Part I, I showed you some programming “tricks” that help you avoid the trap…
Good afternoon readers. You find me sitting comfortably and tired after a vaguely frantic week involving large amounts of new (and huge) equipment, the delivery of a new Mini Cooper, and four days offline at a large format photography…
About a year ago, a person asked the Fun With Perl mailing list about some code they had written to do database queries. It’s important to note that this person was posting from an .it address; why will become…
It’s quite possible to end up with digital music files that don’t have good information about what they are. Files that don’t have ID3 information can rely on paths for album information, for example, and that is lost easily. M3U…
Introduction to Searching Usually, when building an application, a lot of thought goes into how the data is entered and updated, rather than finding it again. Finding data is an afterthought, especially when developing with a small dataset. If…
Deadlines, I love the sound they make as they fly past. Those of you who receive this summary via mail may have noticed that this summary is a little late, with any luck it will make up for its…
Editor’s note: In this third and final batch of recipes excerpted from Perl Cookbook, you’ll find solutions and code examples for extracting HTML table data, templating with HTML::Mason, and making simple changes to elements or text. Sample Recipe: Extracting…
James D. Tisdall is the author of the soon-to-be-released Mastering Perl for Bioinformatics. For some time now, the use of Perl in biology has been standard practice. Perl remains the most popular language among biologists for a multitude of…
Welcome to the last Perl 6 summary of my 35th year. Next week’s summary will (in theory) be written on my 36th birthday (a year of being square, so no change there then). I’ll give you fair warning that…
Editor’s note: The new edition of Perl Cookbook has released, so this week we continue to highlight recipes-new to the second edition-for your sampling pleasure. This week’s excerpts include recipes from Chapter 14 (“Database Access”) and Chapter 18 (“Internet…
Welcome to this week’s Perl 6 summary. This week, for one week only I’m going to break with a long established summary tradition. No, that doesn’t mean I won’t be mentioning Leon Brocard this week. Nope, this week we’re going…
We use Perl for all kinds of things. Web development, data munging, system administration, even bioinformatics; most of us have used Perl for one of these situations. A few people use Perl for building end-user applications with graphical user…
Editor’s note: The new edition of Perl Cookbook is about to hit store shelves, so to trumpet its release, we offer some recipes-new to the second edition-for your sampling pleasure. This week’s excerpts include recipes from Chapter 6 (“Pattern…
Picture, if you will a sunny garden, unaffected by power cuts, floods, plagues of frog or any of the other troubles that assail us in this modern world. Picture, if you will, your summarizer, sat in this garden with…
This is the third (and final) article in a series which form one Perl programmer’s response to the book Design Patterns (also known as the Gang of Four book or simply as GoF, because four authors wrote it). As…
This is the second in a series of articles which form one Perl programmer’s response to the book, Design Patterns (also known as the Gang of Four book or simply as GoF, because four authors wrote it). As I…
"Ooh look, it’s another Perl 6 summary. Doesn’t that man ever take a holiday?" "I think he took one last month." "Is it in Esperanto this week?" "I don’t think so." "Does Leon Brocard get a mention?" "It certainly…
Editor’s note: this document is out of date and remains here for historic interest. See Synopsis 6 for the current design information. As soon as she walked through my door I knew her type: she was an argument waiting…