Seeing as how it is only in EPEL (Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux), I wouldn't expect any change of support for TUV/SL for currently maintained releases.

On 12/28/2016 03:24 PM, Natalia Ratnikova wrote:
Hi All,
With Perl 6 on the scene, is Perl 5 expected to continue to get full
support within SL?
Thanks.
   Natalia.

On 12/28/16 3:09 PM, Paul Robert Marino wrote:
Well I'm hoping my multi-threaded code will actually be able to use
multiple CPU cores on Linux. its worked on Solaris for a long time but
for some reason its always been CPU core bound on Linux.
Also I would like to start a local Perl 6 work group for Perl 5
programmers looking to port their code. there is one for active Perl 6
projects but they don't want any one who doesn't already have an
active Perl 6 project to attend. I asked them very politely for a
clarification on their policy and didn't not get a response. I didn't
get a reply but I know other Perl 5 programmers who showed up looking
to get porting tips, and were asked to leave because they weren't
currently Perl 6 programmers, which is a very poor approach to take if
you really want to rebuild the Perl community.

On Tue, Dec 27, 2016 at 8:55 PM, ToddAndMargo <toddandma...@zoho.com>
wrote:
On Tue, Dec 27, 2016 at 8:28 PM, ToddAndMargo <toddandma...@zoho.com>
wrote:
Hi All,

Perl 6 just hit EPEL: rakudo-star.x86_64 0:0.0.2016.11-1.el7

-T

--
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Computers are like air conditioners.
They malfunction when you open windows
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On 12/27/2016 05:53 PM, Paul Robert Marino wrote:
Cool
I guess that means I really should start writing in Perl 6

I am looking forward to the improved way of passing variables to
subroutines.  :-)


--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Computers are like air conditioners.
They malfunction when you open windows
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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