May I please re-iterate again: please send replies to this thread to the
list, not me.

All it takes is a quick look at to whom you are addressing your email to &
then the list will receive it not me alone.

Thank You.

    Phil.

------ Forwarded Message
From: fudmer rieley <southofmex...@yahoo.com>
Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2011 15:56:33 -0800 (PST)
To: Phil Dobbin <phildob...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: can only install cpan modules as sudo

in response to the question of writing a perl to python converter i
forwarded to the list thisand no one has responded nor has it appeared on
the list.. is something wrong with the list?
Maybe a better project would be to work toward the development of a standard
xsl style sheet able to parse source code or binary of each software
language into a tree such that xslt could parse the intermediate tree and
transform its structure into a multitude of other language source codes or
binaries. I do not know if it would be easier to work at the binary level
than the source code level. But I believe much of the technology to
transform source code and binaries from one language set to another language
set already exist. 

xsl, xslt tools I believe have a perfect fit in perl.

 XSL [code lang1], [ XSLT :: XSLT ], XSL [code lang2[

 Parse the code, build the tree"::parse the tree, output the new code.



Merely writing xsl parsing and tree layouts for each language [source or
complied binary] and conforming the xsl style sheet to the xslt transform
standards, the machine genetics and super protected kernels that talk to
them, might resolve to trivial. Moreover there are lots of persons with
transforming experience around who might help.



Is it not possible to develop the transforms between languages in xslt style
sheet fashion? Would such a transform impose on the copyright or patent
rights of one or more languages or language parts?

--- On Wed, 12/21/11, Phil Dobbin <phildob...@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Phil Dobbin <phildob...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: can only install cpan modules as sudo
To: "perl" <beginners@perl.org>
Date: Wednesday, December 21, 2011, 1:26 PM

On 21/12/11 17:59, "Ryan.Barracuda" <ryan.barrac...@elboardo.com> wrote:

> Thanks! Would you recommend I uninstall ActiveState and install Perlbrew
> first?

Depends whereabouts it is on your machine. If ActiveState resides in ~/ then
yes, I would. If not, it's entirely optional & you can just go ahead &
install perlbrew as per the defaults.

This blog should help you get started:

<http://blog.fox.geek.nz/2010/09/installing-multiple-perls-with.html>

Cheers,

    Phil...

-- 
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