On Sun, Apr 27, 2008 at 03:01:47AM -0500, Jonathan Rockway wrote:
[...]
Anyway, I hate to break this to you... if you want to know every detail of
how the code works, you have to read the code. Reading code is the most
important skill a programmer can have, so I suggest biting the bullet,
opening up your favorite code browser (ECB++), and perusing.

My two cents as a non-professional programmer ... I'd put myself into the category of "Perl amateur enthusiast."

I have a commercial web site with a dedicated server. It uses Perl for some maintenance and content generation. I want to Do It Right, so I've been learning Catalyst and MVC during the past couple of months, in order to replace my current CGI spaghetti code style. I'd love to create a more database-driven site.

As an enthusiast, I'm happy to read all the manuals and get my hands dirty with configuration and design. But getting under the hood with the source code is more work than I want to do. I need a more efficient way to learn What I Need to Know.

I have enjoyed the Catalyst book, although the publisher has been unacceptably slow at publishing errata I've submitted to its web page, so I'd like to see more like it.

Maybe the Perl amateur enthusiast doesn't have much a niche any more, but that's another topic.

Tnx for listening,
Dave Baker

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