On Sat, Apr 28, 2012 at 08:23:54PM +0200, simendsjo wrote: > On Sat, 28 Apr 2012 20:20:45 +0200, H. S. Teoh > <hst...@quickfur.ath.cx> wrote: > > >Then one day my wife made me go to a bookstore with her. While there, > >I offhandedly decided to look for TDPL, on the off-chance that it > >*might* be in the computer books section. And sure enough, I found it > >amid all the PHP, Javascript, how-to-build-a-sucky-website books. So > >I bought it. > > Having *real* computer books in the book shelf..?! You obviously > don't live in Norway :)
lol... apparently I don't! I have to say, though, that I very, very, VERY rarely buy computer related books. Before TDPL, the last computer-related book I bought was the Perl "camel book". And that was, oh, ... 15 years ago? > And it's actually cheaper for me to order the book from Amazon in > the US rather than order it in the book-store... To be honest, I rarely find anything of value in my local bookstore's bookshelves. Mostly it's just fiction (novels, comics, and the like), reference books like the 201th edition of the Oxford, maps of outdated places in the world, get-rich-quick-without-doing-work books, and Javascript and PHP books. The fact that TDPL was buried in the midst of that mountain of chaff was probably a miracle in and of itself. T -- The irony is that Bill Gates claims to be making a stable operating system and Linus Torvalds claims to be trying to take over the world. -- Anonymous