Hello, I recently started learning Perl/Tk. My primary system is FreeBSD 5.2, on which Perl/Tk works fine. At work, I have to use windows, unfortunately, but it works fine, too, under Windows. I don't see why it should not work with Solaris.
So far, I like Perl/Tk very much. I did not have any prior experience in writing graphical interfaces, but Tk makes this *very* easy. There's lots of tutorials available online. If you want a printed book, "Mastering Perl/Tk" is available from O'Reilly. In my opinion it's very good. Perl/Tk also comes with good documentation (perldoc Tk / perldoc Tk::<widget>). Tk is part of ActivePerl by default, under windows. Under Solaris ... uh, I don't know, but Perl is quite probably installed along with the system, so you just check CPAN for Perl/Tk. Otherwise, I briefly touched GtkPerl, but I did not like it as much. Tk is very intuitive to use, in my view, plus it's probably most widely available. I don't think many windows-systems have a Gtk-library installed... (And, of course, I like the minimalistic, Unix-like look I get under... well, Unix-systems. It's a shame in my view that Tk now uses the native windows-look under Win32, but that's a matter of taste.) Kind regards, Benjamin -- If you want to know what god thinks of money, just look at the people he gave it to. -- Dorothy Parker -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <http://learn.perl.org/> <http://learn.perl.org/first-response>