Re: Perl, the new generation

2001-05-15 Thread Stephen P. Potter
Lightning flashed, thunder crashed and Larry Wall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> whispered: | Peter Scott writes: | : So, I wonder aloud, do we want to signify that degree of change with a more > | : dramatic change in the name? | | I'm inclined to think that people will be more likely to migrate if | the

Re: perl5 to perl6

2001-05-15 Thread Stephen P. Potter
Lightning flashed, thunder crashed and Nathan Torkington <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> whi spered: | Here's a program I use to count messages in my mailfile: This is quite a simple little script. The majority of the changes that are being talked about won't ever show up in this. It'd be nice if you could

perlsmall (was Re: Perl, the new generation)

2001-05-15 Thread Michael G Schwern
On Tue, May 15, 2001 at 03:01:47PM -0400, Stephen P. Potter wrote: > It seems to me that recently (the last two years or so) and especially with > 6, perl is no longer the SAs friend. It is no longer a fun litle language > that can be easily used to hack out solutions to problems. See, I have a

Re: perl5 to perl6

2001-05-15 Thread Nathan Torkington
Stephen P. Potter writes: > This is quite a simple little script. The majority of the changes > that are being talked about won't ever show up in this. It'd be > nice if you could show something a little more complex. The point I was making is that the perl4 stuff won't change significantly. T

Re: perl5 to perl6

2001-05-15 Thread Simon Cozens
On Tue, May 15, 2001 at 03:22:04PM -0400, Stephen P. Potter wrote: > This is quite a simple little script. The majority of the changes that are > being talked about won't ever show up in this. It'd be nice if you could > show something a little more complex. The problem is that some people are

Re: Perl, the new generation

2001-05-15 Thread Nathan Torkington
Stephen P. Potter writes: > It seems to me that recently (the last two years or so) and > especially with 6, perl is no longer the SAs friend. It is no > longer a fun litle language that can be easily used to hack out > solutions to problems. It is now (becoming) a full featured > language, quit