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Effective Perl Programming: Writing Better Programs with Perl

di Joseph N. Hall

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2383113,907 (4.13)Nessuno
The Classic Guide to Solving Real-World Problems with Perl--Now Fully Updated for Today's Best Idioms! nbsp; For years, experienced programmers have relied on Effective Perl Programming to discover better ways to solve problems with Perl. Now, in this long-awaited second edition, three renowned Perl programmers bring together today's best idioms, techniques, and examples: everything you need to write more powerful, fluent, expressive, and succinct code with Perl. nbsp; Nearly twice the size of the first edition, Effective Perl Programming, Second Edition, offers everything from rules of thumb to avoid common pitfalls to the latest wisdom for using Perl modules. You won't just learn the right ways to use Perl: You'll learn why these approaches work so well. nbsp; New coverage in this edition includes nbsp; Reorganized and expanded material spanning twelve years of Perl evolution Eight new chapters on CPAN, databases, distributions, files and filehandles, production Perl, testing, Unicode, and warnings Updates for Perl 5.12, the latest version of Perl Systematically updated examples reflecting today's best idioms nbsp; You'll learn how to work with strings, numbers, lists, arrays, strictures, namespaces, regular expressions, subroutines, references, distributions, inline code, warnings, Perl::Tidy, data munging, Perl one-liners, and a whole lot more. Every technique is organized in the same Items format that helped make the first edition so convenient and popular.… (altro)
Aggiunto di recente dangoomie, prengel90, zhuazhua88, wilkinsonmr
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Indeholder "Preface", "Acknowledgements", "Introduction", "Basics", " Item 1: Know your namespaces", " Item 2: Avoid using a slice when you want an element", " Item 3: Don't assign undef when you want an empty list", " Item 4: String and numeric comparisons are different", " Item 5: Remember that 0 and "" are false", " Item 6: Understand conversions between strings and numbers", "Idiomatic Perl", " Item 7: Use $_ for elegance", " Item 8: Know the other default arguments: @_, @ARGV, STDIN", " Item 9: Know common shorthands and syntax quirks", " Item 10: Avoid excessive punctuation", " Item 11: Consider different ways of reading from a stream", " Item 12: Use foreach, map and grep as appropriate", " Item 13: Don't misquote", " Item 14: Learn the myriad ways of sorting", "Regular Expressions", " Item 15: Know the precedence of regular expression operators", " Item 16: Use regular expression memory", " Item 17: Avoid greed when parsimony is best", " Item 18: Remember that whitespace is not a word boundary", " Item 19: Use split for clarity, unpack for efficiency", " Item 20: Avoid using regular expressions for simple string operations", " Item 21: Make regular expressions readable", " Item 22: Make regular expressions efficient", "Subroutines", " Item 23: Understand the difference between my and local", " Item 24: Avoid using @_ directly - unless you have to", " Item 25: Use wantarray to write subroutines returning lists", " Item 26: Pass references instead of copies", " Item 27: Use hashes to pass named parameters.", " Item 28: Use prototypes to get special argument parsing.", " Item 29: Use subroutines to create other subroutines.", "References", " Item 30: Understand references and reference syntax", " Item 31: Create lists of lists with references", " Item 32: Don't confuse anonymous arrays with list literals", " Item 33: Build C-style structs with anonymous hashes", " Item 34: Be careful with circular data structures", " Item 35: Use map and grep to manipulate complex data structures", "Debugging", " Item 36: Enable static and/or run-time checks", " Item 37: Use debugging and profiling modules", " Item 38: Learn to use a debugging version of Perl", " Item 39: Test things by using the debugger as a Perl shell", " Item 40: Don't debug too much at once", "Using Packages and Modules", " Item 41: Don't reinvent the wheel - use Perl modules", " Item 42: Understand packages and modules", " Item 43: Make sure Perl can find the modules you are using", " Item 44: Use perldoc to extract documentation for installed modules", "Writing Packages and Modules", " Item 45: Use h2xs to generate module boilerplate", " Item 46: Embed your documentation with POD", " Item 47: Use XS for low-level interfaces and/or speed", " Item 48: Submit your useful modules to the CPAN", "Object-Oriented Programming", " Item 49: Consider using Perl's object-oriented programming features", " Item 50: Understand method inheritance in Perl", " Item 51: Inherit data explicitly", " Item 52: Create invisible interfaces with tied variables", "Miscellany", " Item 53: Use pack and unpack for data munging", " Item 54: Know how and when to use eval, require, and do", " Item 55: Know when, and when not, to write networking code", " Item 56: Don't forget the file test operators", " Item 57: Access the symbol table with typeglobs", " Item 58: Use @{[Ó]} or a tied hash to evaluate expressions inside strings", " Item 59: Initialize with BEGIN; finish with END", " Item 60: Some interesting Perl one-liners", "Appendix A: sprintf", "Appendix B: Perl Resources", "Index".

Glimrende bog, men bemærk at der er kommet en nyere version. ( )
  bnielsen | Mar 23, 2015 |
I think I have a compulsion. I read every single Perl book I can get my hands on. Why? Because, in my humble opinion, Perl is the greatest programming language to ever cross my path. While it may not be the most optimized, it certainly one of the most flexible and liberating programming languages out there.

In Effective Perl Programming, Hall, McAdams, and foy present several tips, presented in a manner similar to the Cookbooks or Conway’s Perl Best Practices, each tip having a number, and each one being grouped by type (with a catch-all Miscellanea section at the end).

This book shows the reader the best way to harness Perl’s features, and the more efficient ways to wrangle the data that Perl so effortlessly scarfs down.

If you’re a Perl fanatic like me, I must say that your collection is not complete until you’ve procured this well written volume. If you’re just a regular Perl user, you’ll find countless pearls of wisdom buried within this books’ pages. ( )
  aethercowboy | May 6, 2011 |
A simply wonderful perl book. Has some really nice features of 5.10 & 5.12. It's been wonderfully updated and is now on my wishlist. ( )
  JonathanGorman | Jan 13, 2011 |
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» Aggiungi altri autori (10 potenziali)

Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Joseph N. Hallautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
foy, brian dautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
McAdams, Joshua A.autore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Schwartz, Randal L.autore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
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The Classic Guide to Solving Real-World Problems with Perl--Now Fully Updated for Today's Best Idioms! nbsp; For years, experienced programmers have relied on Effective Perl Programming to discover better ways to solve problems with Perl. Now, in this long-awaited second edition, three renowned Perl programmers bring together today's best idioms, techniques, and examples: everything you need to write more powerful, fluent, expressive, and succinct code with Perl. nbsp; Nearly twice the size of the first edition, Effective Perl Programming, Second Edition, offers everything from rules of thumb to avoid common pitfalls to the latest wisdom for using Perl modules. You won't just learn the right ways to use Perl: You'll learn why these approaches work so well. nbsp; New coverage in this edition includes nbsp; Reorganized and expanded material spanning twelve years of Perl evolution Eight new chapters on CPAN, databases, distributions, files and filehandles, production Perl, testing, Unicode, and warnings Updates for Perl 5.12, the latest version of Perl Systematically updated examples reflecting today's best idioms nbsp; You'll learn how to work with strings, numbers, lists, arrays, strictures, namespaces, regular expressions, subroutines, references, distributions, inline code, warnings, Perl::Tidy, data munging, Perl one-liners, and a whole lot more. Every technique is organized in the same Items format that helped make the first edition so convenient and popular.

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