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===================================================================== Free Macromedia JRUN 4 Trial! Free JRUN 4 Trial: Fast, Affordable, Reliable J2EE 1.3 Speed up development and deployment of high performance J2EE apps With the most intuitive, easy-to-use, J2EE application server on the market. With simplified management, web services, and clustering. http://www.oreillynet.com/nlr/macromedia/jr/1 ===================================================================== Greetings, Perl hackers! This is Schuyler Erle, Web hacker for O'Reilly's Online Publishing Group. This week, Simon Cozens is on vacation, and so it is my happy lot to share with you the latest news in the world of Perl. * Perl at large. Perl 5.8.0 is almost ready to see the light of day! After many months of arduous labor by the perl5-porters, led by the indefatigable Jarkko Hietaniemi, a feature freeze has been announced. A "release candidate" version could be available for download as early as next week. Now, for those of you still lusting after a copy of Camel 3, or perhaps one of our other delightful and informative technical books, here's your big chance to get them all. ActiveState has prepared an online programming survey, and in return for your submission, they're willing to enter you in a drawing for up to $1,000 of the O'Reilly books of your choice. Visit ActiveState to find out more. http://www.activestate.com/ProgrammingSurvey/ Also, this week heralds the latest issue of brian d foy's /The Perl Review/. Now, at first, we thought the article's headline and contents were an elaborate April Fool's hoax, but these guys are actually serious, and with good reason. To find out more about this non-joke, read the latest Perl Review at: http://www.theperlreview.com/ Meanwhile, the presentation proposal deadline for YAPC North America 2002 is now less than a month away, on May 1st. The conference itself will be at Washington University in St. Louis, MO on June 26 - 28, 2002. YAPC::NA '02 promises to be every bit as incredible as last year's, which was described by none other than Damian Conway as "a brilliant, neverending, vaguely surreal party of a conference." Don't forget to register and send in your talk proposals! http://www.yapc.org/America/ * What's new on www.perl.com? Speaking of Damian Conway, the illustrious perl wizard from Down Under returns to perl.com this week, with his fourth Exegesis in the ongoing series. As before, Damian attempts to explicate and expand on what Larry's Apocalypses mean for us mere mortals, complete with hypothetical example code. This week, Damian explores many of the topics touched on in Apocalypse 4, including flow control, blocks, exceptions, topicalizers, smart matching, private variables, closures, specialized method calling, scalar interpolation, and err... much more! (*whew*) http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/04/01/exegesis4.html Simon will be back next week, but until then, noble Perl hackers! Use strict and keep your warnings on! SDE ============================================================= The O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference P2P, Web Services, Wireless, and Beyond . . . May 13-16, 2002 Westin Santa Clara, CA Participate in building the Internet OS. Day of Tutorials only $200 when you purchase a Conf. Pass Register Now! and Save $695! Offer ends April 5. http://conferences.oreilly.com/etcon/ =============================================================== *** Featured Articles *** Exegesis 4 What does the fourth apocalypse really mean to you? A4 explained what control structures would look like in Perl 6; Damian Conway expands on those ideas and presents a complete view of the Perl 6 control flow mechanism. http://perl.com/pub/a/2002/04/01/exegesis4.html *** Apocalypse 4: All About Blocks In his latest article explaining the design of Perl 6, Larry Wall tackles the syntax of the language. http://perl.com/pub/a/2002/01/15/apo4.html *** CPAN PLUS For many years the CPAN.pm module has helped people install Perl modules. But it's also been clunky, fragile and amazingly difficult to use programmatically. Jos Boumans introduces CPANPLUS, his project to change all that. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/03/26/cpanplus.html *** mod_perl in 30 minutes This week, Stas Bekman shows us how to install and configure mod_perl, and how to start accelerating CGI scripts with Apache::Registry. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/03/22/modperl.html *** A Perl Hacker's Foray into .NET We've all heard about Microsoft's .NET project. What is it, and what does it mean for Perl? http://perl.com/pub/a/2002/03/19/dotnet.html -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org