Perl.com update -------------------------------------- The Email for www.perl.com Subscribers
============================================================= Sponsored by Macromedia Coldfusion MX MACROMEDIA COLDFUSION MX: BUILD RICH INTERNET APPS FAST ColdFusion MX lets you harness Java, XML, and web services without the steep learning curve. FREE TRIAL. Visit: http://www.oreillynet.com/nlr/hub/08/13/top ============================================================= Hello, world! This is Simon Cozens, www.perl.com managing editor, bringing you the latest goings-on from the world of Perl and our own site. * Perl at large. Excellent news from CMP, publishers of "The Perl Journal." As you'll no doubt remember, TPJ was bought and integrated into "SysAdmin" magazine, and then ceased to exist. Well, it's back. CMP is relaunching "The Perl Journal" as a monthly online ezine, for the extremely reasonable price of $1 per issue. That's right, $12 for a year's subscription. My contacts there say that if they can raise 2,500 subscriptions, the project will go ahead, and that TPJ may, in the future, again have a print edition. The Web site should be available tomorrow: http://www.tpj.com/ Geoff Young has noticed that mod_perl usage is going up and up, according to the latest Security Space server survey: although mod_php is still in the lead with usage on 39 percent of servers, it seems to be falling, while mod_perl has shot up by 20 percent to 37 percent of servers. Big thanks to people like Stas Bekman and Doug McEachern, whose solid work on mod_perl has almost certainly contributed to this trend: https://secure1.securityspace.com/s_survey/data/man.200208/apachemods.html http://perl.apache.org/ Slashdot interviewed Larry Wall last week, and his answers are up now; Larry talks about Perl 6, the role of Perl as a scripting language, and how his relationship with Jesus has shaped Perl: http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/09/06/1343222 And finally, do you want to meet other Perl folk but don't have a Perl Mongers group nearby? Well, you could either start one, or you could sign up for the Perl Meetup taking place next Thursday, September 19th: http://perl.meetup.com/ * What's new on www.perl.com? There are roughly four bazillion books on Perl and CGI available at the moment; one of the most recent is Brent Michalski and Kevin Meltzer's "Writing CGI Applications with Perl." Kevin and Brent are long-standing members of the Perl community--can they do justice to this troublesome topic? Find out in this month's book review: http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/10/review.html Piers Cawley brings us another exciting episode of the Perl 6 summary, with news of the current release and some goals for the next; tidying up the tinderbox builds; long debates about hypothetical variables; how to bring more Parrot hackers into the fold; and, as usual, a lot more besides... http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/p6pdigest/20020908.html And for this week's feature article, Michael Schilli gives us a demonstration of a new logging module--Log::Log4perl is a port of the log4j architecture beloved of Java programmers. But even though it was designed by Java programmers, it still has some useful ideas that can help you when you're debugging your programs. Read on... http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/11/log4perl.html Simon Cozens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ================================================================== O'Reilly Mac OS X Conference Sept 30-Oct 3, 2002, Santa Clara, CA Get your Mac OS X credentials from these leaders and innovators: James Gosling, Jordan Hubbard, Wilfredo Sanchez Vega, David Pogue, Sal Soghoian, Stuart Cheshire, Tim O'Reilly, and more. http://conferences.oreillynet.com/macosx2002/?CMP=EM4944 ================================================================== *** Featured Articles *** Retire your debugger, log smartly with Log::Log4perl! Michael Schilli describes a new way of adding logging facilities to your code, with the help of the log4perl module--a port of Java's log4j. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/11/log4perl.html *** Writing CGI Applications with Perl There are roughly four bazillion books on Perl and CGI available at the moment; one of the most recent is Brent Michalski and Kevin Meltzer's Writing CGI Applications with Perl. Kevin and Brent are long-standing members of the Perl community - can they do justice to this troublesome topic? Find out in this month's book review! http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/10/review.html *** This week on Perl 6 (9/1 - 9/8, 2002) Goals for the next release, arrays and hashes, hypothetical variables, getting more Parrot hackers, and a load besides... http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/p6pdigest/20020908.html *** Going Up? Perl 5.8.0 brought stable threading to Perl - but what does it mean and how can we use it? Get a lift with Sam Tregar as he creates a multi-threaded simulation. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/04/threads.html *** The Fusion of Perl and Oracle Andy Duncan, the coauthor of Perl for Oracle DBAs, explains that Perl's symbiosis with the Oracle database helped in constructing the Perl DBA Toolkit. He also ponders what Ayn Rand might have thought of these two strange bedfellows. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/04/perlfororacle.html *** This week on Perl 6 (8/26 - 9/1, 2002) More talk of garbage collection, the never-ending keys debate, Parrot 0.0.8, lots and lots about regular expressions, and a good deal more... http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/p6pdigest/20020901.html ================================================================== Build a Better Bookshelf with Safari Tech Books Online Get your first 14 days free when you subscribe to Safari Tech Books Online, with over 700 of the best technical books available from O'Reilly and other top publishers. Select ten books to search, bookmark, and annotate. Cut and paste code examples. Find your answers fast. Sign up today! https://www.oreillynet.com/safaripromo/oreilly-14.html ================================================================== -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org