NOTE: use Perl; is on undef hiatus. You can read content, but you can't post it. More info will be forthcoming forthcomingly.
All the Perl that's Practical to Extract and Report
Stories, comments, journals, and other submissions on use Perl; are Copyright 1998-2006, their respective owners.
to quote out of context... (Score:1)
> perl5-porters a few years ago.
> And we peacefully coexist.
hmmm... time travel, right?
p5p of yesteryear and contemporary p5p
(and future p5p?) all get together for
some fantastic fishing trips in the Upper
Devonian (mid-to-late Paleozoic Era).
Where can I get a ticket?
-matt
(feeling a bit non-sequiter this morning)
Embrace the change pudge... (Score:1)
Perl 6 is Perl 5, but more so. I'm not talking about the internals. I'm not talking about the syntax. It's the feeling of the language that's important, and the feeling of the community. As long the languages understand each other and work to develop common ground, everything should be fine.
Perl 6 isn't a magic bullet, but what it is no more and no less another generation of Perl, community and all. Like the prod
Re:Embrace the change pudge... (Score:2, Insightful)
The point here is that I will continue to use Perl 5, that there are substantial numbers of people that will do likewise, that if Perl 6 becomes what Larry and Damian want it to be, that there will be significant fracture of the community, and that we should think about that. If we don't, then the fractures will be very bad for everyone.
I am not talking
Re:Embrace the change pudge... (Score:1)
Okay, let me reiterate this point, being a little less glib about the whole thing.
What makes Perl Perl? Wasn't that the origin
Re:Embrace the change pudge... (Score:1)
You can't expect me to continue reading your post after that opening line, can you?
Re:Embrace the change pudge... (Score:1)
I'd ignore it if I was you.
Re:Embrace the change pudge... (Score:2)
Let's see:
I don't think that got the same feeling as Perl5. There are going to be lots of new idioms in Perl6 that don't have a reason to exist in Perl5. At the same time, these idioms are being added so that the magical behaviors we have come to expect from Perl will continu
Re:Embrace the change pudge... (Score:1)
Gah, that's nothing more than what all the punk kids are using to write:
these days. In my day we had to rub two scalars together to getand we thought ourselves lucky to have thatNo instant migration (Score:1)
I don't pretend to think that just because I know Perl 5 I automatically will know most of Perl 6. I made that mistake already a long time ago with C & C++ - they have some basic similarities, but otherwise they're totally different languages. And guess what? I don't feel like learning yet another language.
I've already got a handle on Ruby and
Re:No instant migration (Score:2)
I've been programming for a reasonable amount of time (around a decade or so) in various languages. One of my hobbies is learning new/different languages.
I can program in Ruby and Python. Reasonably competently. Ditto for PHP, but I have to check the manual for the names of functions and met
---ict / Spoon
Re:No instant migration (Score:1)
If Perl 5 will be as Perl 4 is -- meaning not used for anything except legacy code -- that means that a great many programmers will have moved on to other things that are not Perl. To expect that almost all the people who love Perl 5 will love Perl 6 is unreasonable, because they are too different from each other for that expectation to have any logical basis. So
Re:No instant migration (Score:2)
Quite honestly, it didn't look to me as if Perl 6 was all that different from Perl 5. For sure, it adds quite a number of things, but Perl 6 is supposed to be able to read Perl 5 code (otherwise we lose CPAN, and then I'd definitely worry). Given the latter point, why not upgrade to Perl 6 once it's stable? You'll still be able to use your beloved Perl 5. Over time, you might see a few things that you like in Perl 6, and start using it (the language, no the interpreter) as well. I think that the transiti
-- Robin Berjon [berjon.com]
I still use OS 9 :) (Score:2)
Why not wait until Perl6 is a reality to worry? There are *plenty* of people still using OS 9 though, for obvious reasons, development has mostly ceased on a dated platform. There are plenty of others things to worry about now :)
Re:I still use OS 9 :) (Score:1)
Re:I still use OS 9 :) (Score:2)
If the community fractures, Perl6 will not be the cause of it.
Re:I still use OS 9 :) (Score:1)
Damn I need to upgrade my gf's iMac.
---ict / Spoon
Re:I still use OS 9 :) (Score:1)
---ict / Spoon
Re:I still use OS 9 :) (Score:1)
Re:I still use OS 9 :) (Score:2)
---ict / Spoon
Re:I still use OS 9 :) (Score:1)
I strongly recommend everyone who has the bonus goes to comment prefs [perl.org] and checks "No Score +1 Bonus". It's only the default; you may deselect the checkbox on any given post to get the bonus.
Further, while you're there, you can check out some other new options, like changing the size of your comment box, giving extra (or fewer) points to friends/foes or comments marked as interesting/insightful/whatever, etc.
Schism? (Score:1)
------------------------------
You are what you think.
Re:Schism? (Score:1)
Re:Schism? (Score:2)
Yeees (Score:2)
I think perl4-perl5 is one model for what will happen. There'll be a period of peaceful coexistence, then when nobody wants to maintain the earlier version and answers to bug reports start being "upgrade", and one by one the hangouts move to the new system and become as familiar with it as they were with the old.
I doubt anybody will look down t
Like COBOL? (Score:1)
I don't know how much Perl 5 code is running production workloads - but I guess it is a huge amount and there will be no business drivers for upgradin