Richard Hobson wrote:
> Thanks Brian
> 
> On Wed, 08 Apr 2009 08:37 -0400, "Brian J. Miller"
>> Interesting first choice, but okay... Was there something in particular
>> that you are getting hung up on?
> 
> Yeah, the complexity of chess! I'm getting there. I do miss a lot of
> short-cuts and efficiencies in Perl that would help, but this is a good
> exercise to learn Perl.
> 

"Miss a lot of short-cuts" as in they aren't in Perl, or you just
haven't found them? Can you give a for instance?

>> I'd disagree and say that your suggestion of Intermediate Perl would be
>> the next best step.
>>
>> A book. Some descriptions are more in depth and having a book with a
>> table of contents and index can often be easier to reference when you
>> don't know *where* to look in perldoc, but much of the information will
>> be the same. (Any number of sites and Google can help with where to
>> look.)
> 
> OK. I'll probably stick with perldoc and get "Intermediate Perl". I'm
> currently unemployed, so I can't really fork out for both books right
> now - but I have plenty of time to learn Perl!
> 

Sorry to hear that, I once felt that "Perl" stood for "Paid Employment
Recently Located" after finding a job during the last bubble burst. You
might try a local library, or depending on your location a Perl Mongers
group or Linux Users Group, in which case someone is likely to have a
copy you can borrow. Additionally if you look at "perldoc perl" you will
get a list of docs, reviewing the "tutorials" there, particularly on
objects, references, and modules (the original name of Intermediate
Perl) will get you more advanced quickly.

http://www.pm.org/ - for Perl Mongers groups

HTH and good luck,
-- 
Brian J. Miller
End Point Corp.
http://www.endpoint.com/
br...@endpoint.com

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