www.perl.com update -------------------------------------- The Email for www.perl.com Subscribers ============================================================= Sponsored by WebEvent Low Cost, Scaleable Web-Calendaring Add calendaring and scheduling to your Websites beginning at a one-time fee of just $150! WebEvent is the world leader in web-based calendar software, with a 96% customer approval rating. Access to source code makes the software customizable, and it is compatible with all major operating systems. Try it free for 15 days at www.WebEvent.com/cs/r?perl1. ============================================================= Greetings, Starfighter!^WPerl hacker! This is Schuyler Erle, web hacker for the O'Reilly Network, and it's my pleasure and honor to bring you the week's news and developments both on www.perl.com, and all across the world of Perl. * Perl at large. Perl 5.7.2 is out! As reported in last week's perl5-porters summary, Jarkko had announced that 5.7.2 was on its way. This past Friday, Jarkko officially released Perl 5.7.2 to CPAN. You can get it from: http://www.cpan.org/src/perl-5.7.2.tar.gz This is a development release, not to be used for production systems! However, you might consider this an early release candidate for Perl 5.8.0, the next stable release, as little is expected to change between now and then. Congrats to Jarkko and all the perl5-porters. Meanwhile, our own Joe Johnston has written a nifty new article for oreilly.com, on using Perl in the brave new world of web services. Joe is co-author of _Programming Web Services with XML-RPC_, which was published last month by O'Reilly & Associates, and contains several chapters devoted to Perl's XML-RPC facilities. If you're not familiar with the promise of XML-RPC and web services, I strongly encourage you to take a peek at Joe's article: http://web.oreilly.com/news/xmlrpc_0701.html The big news this week, however, is the last-minute preparations for The Perl Conference 5, with just under a week to go before the world's brightest and best Perl hackers descend on the Sheraton San Diego Hotel; will we see you there? Editor emeritus Mark-Jason Dominus will be hosting another of his wildly popular Lightning Talk sessions. You can find the tentative schedule of this year's rapid-fire five-minute talks at: http://perl.plover.com/lt/tpc2001.html Also, some of this year's Birds-of-a-Feather sessions have been announced. There are quite a few BOF meetings being led by our friends from ActiveState on a wide variety of topic, a couple by Chris Nandor on Slash and on MacPerl, and one simply entitled "Something Interesting Dominus Is Working On". However, the one I'm really looking forward to is the Jam BOF, hosted by Nat Torkington on Wednesday night. Bring your musical instruments! (Also, keep your eyes peeled for the Wireless BOF, which, although not as yet listed on the schedule, I mention because I'll be co-hosting it with the O'Reilly Network's own Rob Flickenger. ;-) You can check out the whole list of scheduled events at: http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2001/pub/10/bofs.html * What's new on www.perl.com? Once again, Simon Cozens is back in the saddle with another irreverent edition of the perl5-porters digest. This week, flames roar over SUPER:: operating at compile time vs. run time; "package;" goes away, and Artur Bergman sets out to fix threading and chew gum, only to discover that he's all out of gum. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p5pdigest/20010716.html As if that wasn't enough, Simon also presents our feature article this week, on his Mail::Audit module, which is a head-on attempt to address the agony of filtering e-mail with procmail. "I didn't want to handle my mail with a collection of ... commands that made sendmail.cf look like a Shakespearean sonnet," Simon writes, referring to procmail's obtuse recipe syntax. "I wanted to program my mail routing in a nice, high-level language. Something like Perl, for instance." Intrigued? Come see how Mail::Audit can be put to work sorting your mail! http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/17/mailfiltering.html Thanks for joining us this week, noble Perl hackers. We'll be back again next week, live from The Perl Conference in San Diego. Hope to see you there! SDE =============================================================== The 3rd O'Reilly Open Source Convention, July 23-27, 2001 Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina FINAL WEEK! -- GNOME's Miguel de Icaza reveals Mono http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2001/view/e_sess/1917 Register now for The Great Open Source Debate, Perl Conference 5, PHP, XML, Python, Java -16 technology tracks in all--http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/ =============================================================== *** Featured Articles *** Mail Filtering with Mail::Audit >From Perl.com Does your e-mail still get dumped into a single Inbox because you haven't taken the time to figure out the incantations required to make procmail work? Simon Cozens shows how you can easily write mail filters in something you already know: Perl. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/17/mailfiltering.html *** This Week on p5p 2001/07/16 >From Perl.com Description 5.7.2 is out, some threading fixes, and much more. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p5pdigest/20010716.html *** Symmetric Cryptography in Perl >From Perl.com Abhijit Menon-Sen explains how to use Perl to keep your secrets... secret. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/10/crypto.html *** Creating Scalable Vector Graphics with Perl >From XML.com Kip Hampton demonstrates how to use Perl, XML, and SVG to generate useful and attractive graphics dynamically. http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2001/07/11/creatingsvg.html *** People Behind Perl: Nathan Torkington >From Perl.com So you use Perl, and you probably know that it was brought to you by "Larry Wall and a cast of thousands". But do you know these people that make up the Perl development team? Simon Cozens talks to Nathan Torkington, a long-time Perl developer and a mainstay of the Perl community. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/03/nat.html Sister Sites: --------------------------------- O'Reilly Network http://www.oreillynet.com The Source for Open and Emerging Technologies. XML.com http://xml.com/ XML from the Inside Out. ONLamp.com http://onlamp.com O'Reilly Network's High-Performance Web Development Site. O'Reilly and Associates http://www.oreilly.com/ O'Reilly computer books, software, and online publishing. ----------------------------------------------------------------- If you want to cancel a subscription to this newsletter, send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] NOTE: Please make certain to unsubscribe from the email address at which you receive this message For non-automated human help email [EMAIL PROTECTED] ----------------------------------------------------------------- -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org