Todd, some free advice:

1. DOCUMENTATION

The docs are a volunteer effort. You can help by contributing changes
and submitting issues.

Try to use the docs first instead of using an internet search.  That
will help you submit issues if you don't find what you are looking
for.

You really need to buy one of the fine Perl 6 books that are
available.  See the perl6.org webite and this page:

  https://perl6.org/resources/https://perl6.org/resources/ (look at
the bottom left-hand side)

See this page for book choice help:  https://perl6book.com/

Anyone on the #perl6 IRC (or this mailing list) will be happy to
explain their preferences.

2. DESIGN

The original Perl 6 specifications are here (linked from the
bottom-right of perl6.org):

  https://design.perl6.org/

The specifications are defined in the test suite (also linked from the
bottom-right of per6.org):

  https://github.com/perl6/roast

3. YOUR CODE USE

One of the great features of Perl 6, to me, is the ability to use kebab
case, e.g.,:

  my $some-var = 'a';

When you submit code examples, making them less wordy and "noisy"
would help us help you. Perl 6 code can be be written very sparsely.

Best regards,

-Tom

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