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All the Perl that's Practical to Extract and Report
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crystal balls and navels (Score:1)
Reading computer language development as an evolutionary issue is interesting.
I think although the analogy of a business (Sun) and a computer language (perl) is an okay, even good, analogy, a business organization has more in common with a biological organism than a language, and a language has more in common with a religion than a business.
Although running a business requires winning hearts and minds and using the language involves programmers tapping at keyboards,
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If they knew about it.
Here's a soul crushing exercise. Go to your favorite popular web 2.0 style search site, Digg [digg.com] or Technorati [technorati.com] or del.icio.us [delicious.com] and type in "Perl". Look at the garbage that comes back.
And if it were easy to install.
Jifty and Catalyst are both awesome web frameworks able to go toe to toe with anything out there. But inst
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Not at all, but I think it’s an orthogonal issue. Ease of installation is a toolchain problem; Perl 6 is a language, not a toolchain. However, I agree that it needs to have a toolchain that’s good enough. There has been some grunting that “we’ll make that work”, but no concrete design has happened.
Personally, I think that’s just as well, since the Perl 5 toolchain is suboptimal anyway, and anything we do for Perl 5 will be roughly applicable to Perl 6 as well, particula
Fix Perl 5 and Perl 6 will follow. (Score:2)
Yep, that's the idea. Fix Perl 5 and Perl 6 will follow. Worked for testing.
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