If you have ever tried to load all the modules that you use and build a
.exe like a PDL.exe I Have noticed that it takes so long it is not worth the
effort
in that the purpose of a module are to keep the software lite weight so as to
run fast
as modules accumulate the loading start up seems to be effected dramatically!
I have done a very large 66 gigabyte project with compression routines(that I
developed)
that transformed the data into 3.6 gigbytes of data, with perl in about 11hours
with
2.4 ghz x4 CPU's running full speed ... I can Load that data now
in a fraction of a second and use mapping (that I developed) into about
40 Megabytes of Ram .. now I can search threw that 60 gigabyte database
for a sequence in seconds and can get a match or the match is not there
so that being said the software is good ... but you have to use many ideas
in many different way to achieve your success ...
as far as commercially speaking I would never use database software
developed by anyone other then me and my company,
so that way only you andyour company know how to use the software
this make data safer in the long run for clients for the company
and for the internet ...
-Mark R Baker
________________________________
From: Fabio D'Alfonso <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, May 2, 2012 3:41 PM
Subject: [Perldl] Modeling Languages & Perl
Hi,
I have a lot of literature about Perl and I see that up to advanced material
potentially related to very large projects, there is not a single attempt (it
seems) to leverage UML (or similar tools) to organize the job as a part of the
learning.
Perl is both fun and powerful, but the flattened landscape Perl , Regex, DBI,
LWP, PDL, XML, and so on and on, can become to seem an enumeration not
suggesting a process to determine a mapping (or more alternatives to choose in)
between a goal and the resources available.
Some people here manage large projects and could they tell their thinks on this?
Thanks
--
Fabio D'Alfonso
'Enabling Business Through IT'
cell. +39.348.059.40.22 *
web: http://www.fabiodalfonso.com
email: [email protected]
twitter: http://www.twitter.com/fabio_dalfonso
linkedin: http://it.linkedin.com/in/fabiodalfonso
fax: +39.06.874.599.581
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