Perl Weekly #679 - Perl is like...
Gabor Szabo
Posted on July 29, 2024
Originally published at Perl Weekly 679
Hi there!
Analogies can be very useful to describe a lesser known thing by some commonly known thing, but if your readers don't know what is the dying Pontiac then maybe it is mostly confusing. For example I immediately thought about two things: the famous cruiser the Potemkin and the Potomac river. Neither of those seem to be related. Apparently the Pontiac is a car brand primarily sold in North America. You can also search for dying Pontiac, but after seeing the results I got really confused.
Anyway, the discussions, both about Perl being the Pontiac dying or maybe not and the (lack of) maintenance of DBIx::Class and in general the problem with Open Source projects were very interesting. I recommend you read them.
On a somewhat related topic the results of the 2024 Stack Overflow Survey were published. Perl is pretty low on the popularity list. Which ties back to the discussion. Is it important (for you) that the technology you use is popular? Does it have an impact on your ability to do whatever you want to or have to do? For example for me it is important as I mostly teach the technologies.
Let me use this opportunity to mention that in the Code Mavens Meetup group I organize virtual presentations mostly about Rust, Python, and Perl. You are invited to join the group and join some of the live presentations.
Enjoy your week!
--
Your editor: Gabor Szabo.
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Compact bytesize work, not to be missed to be honest. Self documented work in display. Well done.
Weighted Letters and Even Chars
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Thoroughly discussed Raku solution would keep you busy for sure. Highly recommended.
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Perl Weekly Challenge 279: Sort Letters
If you are looking for variations then this is the right place for you. You really don't want to skip it.
Perl Weekly Challenge 279: Split String
One-liner with the power of regex. The end result is cute little solution. Thanks for everything.
Perl Weekly Challenge 279
For the first, I saw someone used the experimental for_list. This week task perfectly suited for it. Well done.
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Solutions without any gimmicks, pure Perl solution with plenty of discussion. Great work.
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Use of Perl regex magic can be very handy. Thanks for your contributions every week.
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Another great use of CPAN module List::MoreUtils and using zip6 out of box. Great work.
Split and Sort Strings of Letters
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Weekly collections
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Events
Continuous Integration (CI): GitHub Actions for Perl Projects
August 4, 2024, in Zoom
GitHub Pages for Perl developers
August 15, 2024, in Zoom
London Perl and Raku Workshop
October 26, 2024, in London, UK
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(C) Copyright Gabor Szabo
The articles are copyright the respective authors.
Posted on July 29, 2024
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