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.
All About Perception (Score:1)
You can say you're working on perl6 all you want, and put out stable parrot releases, but they're not stable releases of "perl 6" until you can go to perl.com and when you click "download" it gives you something other than 5.10.
*I* know perl6 is progressing, and *you* know perl6 is progressing, and other folks around here know it's progressing, and perhaps it's even usable day-to-day right now, but it's not perceived as "there, we're ready to have regular users use this, and we declare it perl 6.0" until it's really released. Release-early-release-often is good for development, but it's not the same as "we've put out a non-development release and we stand by it."
Until that 6.0 comes out, with a big announcement, no one will believe it's anything more than Enlightenment [enlightenment.org] eternal snapshot mode. ;)
Reply to This
Re: (Score:1)
Fun fact: I edited the Perl.com Downloads [perl.com] page sometime around December 2007 to include information on how to download and build monthly Rakudo releases with the perl6 binary that Jerry and I made work.
Silly me. I thought it was also good for demonstrating that the software does actually exist -- you know, be
Re: (Score:1)
include information on how to download and build monthly Rakudo release
Sure, and right now, it says it's an "in-development" version for "experimentation and testing." Not exactly saying "we're want testers!"
I'm not saying there isn't progress, I'm saying that people won't treat it as "real" until, as Alias said, people say "here's perl 6.0 alpha 1" and many folks won't really start evaluating it for their own uses until it at least says "beta 1" on the announcements.
Until then, it just looks like a development in-progress that isn't ready for a wider audience yet.
I know you