Perl Mongers' Site

Houston.pm

🌐
Content About πŸ—ΊοΈ
❓
πŸ”‘

What Every Perl Programmer Should Know: tips, tricks, and common knowledge, part 2 πŸ”—
1148169600  

🏷️ news
May 2006
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
We concluded our discussion on Perl common knowledge, tip, and tricks. Plus, we discussed some gotchas relating to context and dubroutines.

What Every Perl Programmer Should Know: tips, tricks, and common knowledge πŸ”—
1145577600  

🏷️ news
April 2006
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
Wade lead a discussion on common Perl features, tips, and tricks that every Perl programmer should know.

Accessing a USB device from Perl, part 3. πŸ”—
1142899200  

🏷️ news
March 2006
Presenter: Paul Archer
Paul concluded this series of presentations on libusb for control the USB Visual Indicator from Perl. We used the current prototype to control two separate USB VSI devices on the same laptop and solved some difficulties with Inline::C and modules.

Accessing a USB device from Perl, part 2. πŸ”—
1140480000  

🏷️ news
February 2006
Presenter: Paul Archer
Paul continued the group programming session using Inline::C and libusb to control the USB Visual Indicator from Perl. In this installment, we worked around discrepencies in the documents and provided a Perl-friendly interface to a low-level function. Once again, audience participation was half the fun.

Accessing a USB device from Perl πŸ”—
1137801600  

🏷️ news
January 2006
Presenter: Paul Archer
Paul led a group programming session using Inline::C and libusb to control a USB-based programmable light from Perl. The device was fun, the code was interesting, and a good time was had by all.

Graphics in Perl πŸ”—
1129852800  

🏷️ news
October 2005
Presenter: Bill Dillon
This month, Bill presented a talk combining Perl, Graphics, programming metrics, and astronomy. He showed how easy it is to produce various charts with the GD::Graph Perl module. We saw how to convert a data set into line, bar, point, and pie charts. In the process, we also learned a bit about cataclysmic variable stars and amateur astronomy.

Development Tools for Perl πŸ”—
1127260800  

🏷️ news
September 2005
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
This month was planned as a discussion of development tools for use with Perl and a discussion of projects we are working on. These slides list a few tools that work well with Perl, including editors, an IDE, and version control tools.
Topic: Project Help
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
One of the members had some questions about Perl program design involving a program from work. We spent about an hour discussing issues of Perl code design.

Text::Query and Getopt::Long πŸ”—
1124582400  

🏷️ news
August 2005
Presenter: Paul Archer
Paul discussed his program for manipulating keywords in image files, focusing on the modules Text::Query and Getopt::Long.

Perl Module: Regexp::Common πŸ”—
1121904000  

🏷️ news
July 2005
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
After a couple of months of regular expressions, we take a month off and learn how to not write regular expressions. The Regexp::Common module provides relatively easy access to a fairly large number of common regexes for your matching pleasure.
Topic: General Perl Discussion
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
We had some extra time this month, so the members started a interesting discussion of a number of Perl related topics, including CPAN, pack and unpack, and the modules in the standard Perl distribution.

Basic/Intermediate Perl regular expressions (part 2 of 2) πŸ”—
1119312000  

🏷️ news
June 2005
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
This month, we finished the discussion of Basic/Intermediate Perl regular expressions. The presentation covered some of the lesser used options and anchors, regex surprises, and some optimization considerations.

Basic/Intermediate Perl regular expressions (part 1 of 2) πŸ”—
1116633600  

🏷️ news
May 2005
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
We begin the discussion of Basic/Intermediate Perl regular expressions. After a quick refresher on the basics of regular expressions, we go a bit beyond the basics. We also discussed when regular expressions aren't the right tool for the job, readability, and tips for improving your regular expressions.

Perl Module: PARhttpGrab.exehttpGrab.par πŸ”—
1114041600  

🏷️ news
April 2005
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
We went through the documentation and some examples of the PAR module. This module supports building Perl ARchives (like JARs, except for Perl). It also supports turning those PAR files into executables.

Perl Core Language: References and Quoting πŸ”—
1111363200  

🏷️ news
March 2005
Presenter: G. Wade Johnson
We discussed two basic parts of the Perl language: references and different forms of quoting. Wade covered the basics of references, including how to create and use them. We also touched on objects. Next we turned to Perl's many quoting operators, how they are used, and how they differ.

25 most recent posts older than 1111363200
Size:
Jump to:
POTZREBIE
Copyright © 2003-2020 Houston.pm.
Except as otherwise noted, this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License.
The use of the camel image in association with the Perl programming language is a trademark of O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. Used with permission.