From: "Ben Tilly" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2007 14:18:57 -0700
On 9/11/07, Palit, Nilanjan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> > It is very bad form to use map as a looping construct.
>
> Can you elaborate why it is a bad form: readability, performance, ...?
>
As noted during the tech meeting:
http://geekz.co.uk/lovesraymond/
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On 9/11/07, Palit, Nilanjan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> > It is very bad form to use map as a looping construct.
>
> Can you elaborate why it is a bad form: readability, performance, ...?
> Just want to understand the underlying reason. (To me, both the for &
> map inline forms appear to be
There are people at/from MIT who use perl (Small Languages conferences anyone?)
Myself and Alex V. included. Not so long ago, SIPB used to be home to some perl
folk too. IME though, there aren't really that many coders at MIT, though I've
recently soeen some folks working ona meebo-like thing in
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Perl Programmer with DBA and Operations Experience
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hi all,
i have been consulting with a local firm founded by some mit kids (hi
justin!). i mentioned to them that they could use a few more inexpensive
coders like some mit students but they said they can't find any who know
perl. this brings me to the title of this email, perl vs. mit.
from
> (I've never quite understood why that's allowed by strict 'refs', but
it > is.)
I did think of using a ref to a sub, but just assumed that strict would
flag that too, so I didn't bother trying! Instead, I ended up taking
Martin Owen's suggestion of doing an eval, though that is probably a
On 9/11/07, Palit, Nilanjan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So I tried this using the following code, where %format_conv has an
> entry for each type of conversion needed with a list of items:
[...]
> When I run it, the 'defined' part works fine, but I get an error on the
> last line:
>
> Can't use
So I tried this using the following code, where %format_conv has an
entry for each type of conversion needed with a list of items:
foreach my $fmtcnv (sort keys %format_conv)
{
my @itemlist= @{$format_conv{$fmtcnv}}; #List of items
print "\nFormat conversion: '$fmtcnv'\n\t",
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