On Fri, Aug 04, 2000 at 11:37:30AM -0700, Peter Scott wrote: > It would not be "you need to rebuild your perl", but "the administrator of > this site does not allow unstrict programming by default." The original poster said "a compile-time option to be decided by the administrator of each site". I (and Johan) took that to mean "decided when perl was compiled". Letting administrators set a certain strictness level on *every* program run sounds like we should make perl always read /etc/perlrc if it exists. -Scott -- Jonathan Scott Duff [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl fre... Bryan C . Warnock
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Per... Nathan Wiger
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of constra... J. David Blackstone
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of con... Johan Vromans
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of constraints ... J. David Blackstone
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of constra... Peter Scott
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of constra... Johan Vromans
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of con... Peter Scott
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of... Jonathan Scott Duff
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of... Chaim Frenkel
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of... skud
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of constra... Tom Christiansen
- Re: RFC 16 (v1) Keep default Perl free of constraints ... Ariel Scolnicov