Poll: Which editor(s) or IDE(s) are you using for Perl development?
Hi, I have setup a simple 5-second poll to find out what editor(s) or IDE(s) people use for Perl development. I'd appreciate very much if you clicked on the link and answered the question. You can mark up to 3 answers. Please also forward this mail in the company you are working and to people in your previous company so we can get a large and diverse set of responses. The poll will be closed within a week. Please act now! http://bit.ly/perleditorpoll thanks Gabor http://szabgab.com/blog.html http://perlmongers.wordpress.com/ ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list Perl-Win32-Users@listserv.ActiveState.com To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Editor - finding lines
I would think just a normal search feature would be good enough. Find the first one and then hit next for the next one etc. That, IMO is the best feature of Crimson Editor... you can highlight something with the mouse, hit F3 and it takes you to the next instance of it, hit shiftF3 and it takes you to the previous one. And for free, it's worth every penny ;-) R. ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Editor - finding lines
Ken Cornetet wrote: Was the mainframe editor XEDIT? If so, check out The Hessling Editor http://sourceforge.net/projects/hessling-editor/ -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Valerie Kramer Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2004 4:18 PM To: Perl-Win32-Users Subject: Editor - finding lines Since we're talking about editors (one more time!), I'd like to ask if anyone knows of a specific feature in any PC-based editors. Back in my IBM Mainframe programming days I used an editor that would search for a string and return a display of all of the lines containing that string. I could then edit the line(s) or go to one of them to perform edits on that area. (I don't remember the exact mechanics... it's been quite a few years now!) I've often wished I had that tool on the PC and even bought a copy of SPF that I thought might do the job. I don't remember now if it did, but I do know I was very unsatisfied with it. perhaps if I'd become expert with it maybe it is ok, but I never managed to get comfortable with it. Does anyone know of another editor with a search feature similar to what I described? Valerie Visual SlickEdit does this . . . but it aint cheap :-( -- The information contained in this communication and any attachments is confidential and may be privileged, and is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s). Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately by replying to this message and destroy all copies of this message and any attachments. ASML is neither liable for the proper and complete transmission of the information contained in this communication, nor for any delay in its receipt. ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Editor - finding lines
On Thu, May 27, 2004 at 09:36:52AM +0100, Beckett Richard-qswi266 wrote: I would think just a normal search feature would be good enough. Find the first one and then hit next for the next one etc. That, IMO is the best feature of Crimson Editor... you can highlight something with the mouse, hit F3 and it takes you to the next instance of it, hit shiftF3 and it takes you to the previous one. in vim you position the cursor over a word, and hit '*' to jump to the next + highlite all matches. 'n'/'N' will move you to the next/previous match. I would like it even better though, sometimes I want to highlite several items in different colors, like keeping multiple active searches, each with a different highlite color. And for free, it's worth every penny ;-) vim, even freeer. one of my favorite vim features, is the ability to pipe a selected portion ( or all ) of the text through an external program, and have it replace by the output of this program. when manipulating some piece of information, I often prefix it with '__DATA__' and a little bit of perl, starting with 'while (DATA)', and then pipe the whole contents of my current window through perl, with '!Gperl' so I can easily experiment with the data while keeping it in my editor. ( always fun to have a 'my XYZ is better'-type discussion. ) willem ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Editor - finding lines
Valerie Kramer wrote: ... used an editor that would search for a string and return a display of all of the lines containing that string. I could then edit the line(s) or go to one of them to perform edits on that area. ... TextPad has a search across all open documents, or all files in a directory. The results are shown in a separate window and double clicking the result takes you to that section of code in that file. Again like UltraEdit it's not free, but in the same price range. It also has color syntax highlighting for perl and you can set up the tools to execute perl from within the editor. http://www.textpad.com Paula ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Editor - finding lines
On Thu, 27 May 2004, Beckett Richard-qswi266 wrote: Date: Thu, 27 May 2004 09:36:52 +0100 From: Beckett Richard-qswi266 [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Perl-Win32-Users [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Editor - finding lines I would think just a normal search feature would be good enough. Find the first one and then hit next for the next one etc. That, IMO is the best feature of Crimson Editor... you can highlight something with the mouse, hit F3 and it takes you to the next instance of it, hit shiftF3 and it takes you to the previous one. And for free, it's worth every penny ;-) R. Greetings; Yes, Crimson is very good. I have it installed on all (8) of the computers I use. But, if you have ever used XEdit/THE you would not consider a normal search feature to be anywhere near good enough. The feature in XEdit displays only the lines/records containing the search string. Similar to layers in an image editor or a DTP program. So, if you can display 80 lines in your window you will see 80 lines that contain your search string, not just 80 lines, one or two of which contain it. Scrolling continues to show only lines containing the search string. ob: perl, Suppose you need to find all the places where child is called and in what subroutines it may be in. The command would be all /child(/|(/sub // {/) and you would be viewing all subroutine headers and all calls to child in the correct order, and only those lines. Xedit was developed back in the '80s and was a big hit when it came out. Previously there was only a line editor. It is just unfortunate that other full-screen editors didn't incorporate some of its features. Get THE and check it out. It is very customizable and may give you some ideas if you decide to write an editor of your own! Good Luck! Dennis ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Editor - finding lines
Capacio, Paula J wrote: TextPad has a search across all open documents, or all files in a directory. The results are shown in a separate window and double clicking the result takes you to that section of code in that file. Again like UltraEdit it's not free, but in the same price range. It also has color syntax highlighting for perl and you can set up the tools to execute perl from within the editor. http://www.textpad.com Paula You can also supply a regex so that the output TP collects from a command (Perl, Java, C) is hyperlinked by filename/line number. So clicking error at X.pm, line 10 takes you there. Another useful one is CTRL+M over a bracket (brace/angel-bracket, etc) to find the matching pair ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Editor - finding lines
Dirk Bremer - Systems Programmer II - ESS/AMS - NISC St. Peters USA Central Time Zone 636-922-9158 ext. 8652 fax 636-447-4471 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.nisc.cc - Original Message - From: Lee Goddard [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Capacio, Paula J [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Perl-Win32-Users [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2004 09:12 Subject: Re: Editor - finding lines Capacio, Paula J wrote: TextPad has a search across all open documents, or all files in a directory. The results are shown in a separate window and double clicking the result takes you to that section of code in that file. Again like UltraEdit it's not free, but in the same price range. It also has color syntax highlighting for perl and you can set up the tools to execute perl from within the editor. http://www.textpad.com Paula You can also supply a regex so that the output TP collects from a command (Perl, Java, C) is hyperlinked by filename/line number. So clicking error at X.pm, line 10 takes you there. Another useful one is CTRL+M over a bracket (brace/angel-bracket, etc) to find the matching pair ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs Multi-Edit does this nicely in a separate pane that lists the results of the search. You then click on any of the results and the main pane will be positioned to the affected line. This works both for a single file/window or multiple files/windows. Multi-Edit is not a free product, somewhere around $100.00. I have used it for years and have been very happy with it. I have also heard good things about UltraEdit. Dirk Bremer - Systems Programmer II - ESS/AMS - NISC St. Peters USA Central Time Zone 636-922-9158 ext. 8652 fax 636-447-4471 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.nisc.cc ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Editor - finding lines
ConTEXT also does this and colours your text for a number of languages. Best of all its freeware! -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dirk Bremer (NISC) Sent: 27 May 2004 15:32 To: Perl-Win32-Users Subject: Re: Editor - finding lines Dirk Bremer - Systems Programmer II - ESS/AMS - NISC St. Peters USA Central Time Zone 636-922-9158 ext. 8652 fax 636-447-4471 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.nisc.cc - Original Message - From: Lee Goddard [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Capacio, Paula J [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Perl-Win32-Users [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2004 09:12 Subject: Re: Editor - finding lines Capacio, Paula J wrote: TextPad has a search across all open documents, or all files in a directory. The results are shown in a separate window and double clicking the result takes you to that section of code in that file. Again like UltraEdit it's not free, but in the same price range. It also has color syntax highlighting for perl and you can set up the tools to execute perl from within the editor. http://www.textpad.com Paula You can also supply a regex so that the output TP collects from a command (Perl, Java, C) is hyperlinked by filename/line number. So clicking error at X.pm, line 10 takes you there. Another useful one is CTRL+M over a bracket (brace/angel-bracket, etc) to find the matching pair ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs Multi-Edit does this nicely in a separate pane that lists the results of the search. You then click on any of the results and the main pane will be positioned to the affected line. This works both for a single file/window or multiple files/windows. Multi-Edit is not a free product, somewhere around $100.00. I have used it for years and have been very happy with it. I have also heard good things about UltraEdit. Dirk Bremer - Systems Programmer II - ESS/AMS - NISC St. Peters USA Central Time Zone 636-922-9158 ext. 8652 fax 636-447-4471 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.nisc.cc ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs EBRD SECURITY NOTICE This email has been virus scanned __ This message may contain privileged information. If you have received this message by mistake, please keep it confidential and return it to the sender. Although we have taken steps to minimise the risk of transmitting software viruses, the EBRD accepts no liability for any loss or damage caused by computer viruses and would advise you to carry out your own virus checks. The contents of this e-mail do not necessarily represent the views of the EBRD. __ ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Editor
Do you know any good Perl Editor software? ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Editor
Title: Message Yeh there is this package called Good Perl Editor HTH? ;-) -Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ronald EstesSent: 18 May 2004 23:24To: perl-win32-usersSubject: Editor Do you know any good Perl Editor software? ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Editor
Ronald Estes wrote: Do you know any good Perl Editor software? Here we go again - the old editor wars. I recommend vim and emacs since they are both powerful, free and portable to UNIX/Win32/etc. vim is a little easier and emacs a little more powerful. Unless you need an IDE (I've never needed one) and I'm sure someone will chime in. -- ,-/- __ _ _ $Bill LuebkertMailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (_/ / )// // DBE CollectiblesMailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] / ) /-- o // // Castle of Medieval Myth Magic http://www.todbe.com/ -/-' /___/__/_/_http://dbecoll.tripod.com/ (My Perl/Lakers stuff) ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Editor
http://www.freeprogrammingresources.com/perlide.html On Tue, 18 May 2004 17:23:54 -0500, Ronald Estes [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Do you know any good Perl Editor software? ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Editor
Title: Message -Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ronald EstesSent: Tuesday, May 18, 2004 5:24 PMTo: perl-win32-usersSubject: Editor Do you know any good Perl Editor software? Vim ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Editor
The same here. I use note tab pro. There is also a light (free software) version http://www.notetab.com/ I didn't come across a perl editor and was wondering is there any? Andries ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Simple text editor under Windows
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Eclipse (I use 2.1) has an outline window that allows you to jump directly to subs. Hmm... Eclipse seems to be an umbrella name for a rather large project tree. Which specific component of Eclipse are you using--is it the Workbench? A quick glance at the docs shows no mention of perl. It seems to be java-centric--is Eclipse a bit overkill if you'd only be using it for perl? - Mark. ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Simple text editor under Windows
The perl plug-ins are at: http://e-p-i-c.sourceforge.net/ Like any IDE, it would be overkill for a single script or file. If you're building modules or a larger app with resource file it makes sense. It also appears to integrate well with CVS (I don't use that, but it should be noted.) JW Thomas, Mark - BLS CTR [EMAIL PROTECTED] 03/03/2004 01:12 PM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' [EMAIL PROTECTED], Thomas, Mark - BLS CTR [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Simple text editor under Windows [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Eclipse (I use 2.1) has an outline window that allows you to jump directly to subs. Hmm... Eclipse seems to be an umbrella name for a rather large project tree. Which specific component of Eclipse are you using--is it the Workbench? A quick glance at the docs shows no mention of perl. It seems to be java-centric--is Eclipse a bit overkill if you'd only be using it for perl? - Mark. ** This e-mail and any files transmitted with it are considered confidential and are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed (intended). This communication is subject to agent/client privilege. If you are not the intended recipient (received in error) or the person responsible for delivering the e-mail to the intended recipient, be advised that you have received this e-mail in error and that any use, dissemination, forwarding, printing or copying of this e-mail is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender immediately. ** ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Simple text editor under Windows
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The perl plug-ins are at: http://e-p-i-c.sourceforge.net/ Ah. Actually, that looks pretty good. I use Komodo now, and I like Komodo, but EPIC looks like it's getting pretty close in functionality. It seems to only lack a debugger :( As much as I'd love to have the subroutine list feature (and a _working_ method-assist feature), I don't think I'd want to sacrifice the nice visual debugger. I may give it a try though. Thanks for the info. -- Mark Thomas[EMAIL PROTECTED] Internet Systems Architect User Technology Associates, Inc. $_=q;KvtuyboopuifeyQQfeemyibdlfee;; y.e.s. ;y+B-x+A-w+s; ;y;y; ;;print;; ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Simple text editor under Windows
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I use the Perl Dev Kit, which includes PerlApp for executables, and the Graphical debugger. Both can be set up and called as tools from Eclipse. If you have Komodo, do you not already have the separate debugger? Well, it's not really separate. It's integrated rather nicely. ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Simple text editor under Windows
I use the Perl Dev Kit, which includes PerlApp for executables, and the Graphical debugger. Both can be set up and called as tools from Eclipse. If you have Komodo, do you not already have the separate debugger? John Wunderlich Project Manager, Privacy Ceridian Canada Ltd. 8777, Autoroute Transcanadienne Montreal, Quebec H4S 1Z6 Phone: 514.908.3094 Fax: 514.908.3119 eFax: 240.214.8893 We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act, but a habit. Aristotle Thomas, Mark - BLS CTR [EMAIL PROTECTED] 03/03/2004 01:52 PM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Simple text editor under Windows [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The perl plug-ins are at: http://e-p-i-c.sourceforge.net/ Ah. Actually, that looks pretty good. I use Komodo now, and I like Komodo, but EPIC looks like it's getting pretty close in functionality. It seems to only lack a debugger :( As much as I'd love to have the subroutine list feature (and a _working_ method-assist feature), I don't think I'd want to sacrifice the nice visual debugger. I may give it a try though. Thanks for the info. -- Mark Thomas [EMAIL PROTECTED] Internet Systems Architect User Technology Associates, Inc. $_=q;KvtuyboopuifeyQQfeemyibdlfee;; y.e.s. ;y+B-x+A-w+s; ;y;y; ;;print;; ** This e-mail and any files transmitted with it are considered confidential and are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed (intended). This communication is subject to agent/client privilege. If you are not the intended recipient (received in error) or the person responsible for delivering the e-mail to the intended recipient, be advised that you have received this e-mail in error and that any use, dissemination, forwarding, printing or copying of this e-mail is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender immediately. ** ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Simple text editor under Windows
Hi, I don't want to start a huge flame war with this question, so please exercise restraint. I have just started to use Perl under Windows NT. I have been using Wordpad to edit my perl scripts simply because it is there (and Notepad doesn't have search and replace). My problem is that perl error messages say error at line 187, and if I try to count down that far then I get lost. So, what is a nice simple editor that will allow me to jump to line 187? Note the word simple; if Wordpad can be made to do this then that would be the preferred solution. I could use MS Word (Edit-Find-Go To-Line) but this seems like overkill. My background is UNIX under which I used vi to edit text files. I can probably find a port of vi to Windows NT, but wondered what others use. Many thanks for any help you can give. Regards, Martin ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Simple text editor under Windows
- Original Message Follows - I don't want to start a huge flame war with this question, so please exercise restraint. I have just started to use Perl under Windows NT. I have been using Wordpad to edit my perl scripts simply because it is there (and Notepad doesn't have search and replace). My problem is that perl error messages say error at line 187, and if I try to count down that far then I get lost. [...] My background is UNIX under which I used vi to edit text files. I can probably find a port of vi to Windows NT, but wondered what others use. If you're used to Vi, then ViM would be an excellent option for you. It has color syntax-highlighting, multi-windowing and a veritable cornucopia of enhancements to the original Vi feature-set. It is supported on many OS's. And it's careware - just send what you want to the author's favorite charity. It is at http://www.vim.org/. ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: web form editor
Hi! Im much interested in this topic but all i got with this code was a missing object image in IE. I tried to download a bunch of files like Richtx32.ocx and msxml3.cab that i found on my way to making it work but nothing seemed to make the difference. Can anyone please explain this code further, installation instructions, or direct me to some page covering this topic (i've tried ASPN, MSDN, Google with no luck!). Thanks / Magnus -- Original Message -- From: Joseph Youngquist [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Mon, 11 Nov 2002 14:17:51 -0500 Found what I was talking about. object classid=clsid:3B7C8860-D78F-101B-B9B5-04021C009402 width=320 height=240 /object placing that in an html file will add a richedit control 6.0 to the page. Burak Gürsoy's e-mail is what your looking for though. JY ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: web form editor
Im much interested in this topic but all i got with this code was a missing object image in IE. I tried to download a bunch of files like Richtx32.ocx and msxml3.cab that i found on my way to making it work but nothing seemed to make the difference. Can anyone please explain this code further, installation instructions, or direct me to some page covering this topic (i've tried ASPN, MSDN, Google with no luck!). Don't bother with ActiveX controls and other nonsense if you're using IE5 or higher. This capability is built into IE5+. This web site explains it adequately: http://www.devarticles.com/art/1/90 I've seen a few editor javascript files you can download off the net for free that enable this functionality, but it will pay dividends to learn how it works for yourself. jpt ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: web form editor
2nd try: Does anybody know how these inline editors are created into a web page form, and if there are any perl modules to support this? Thanks. --- George Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All, I do all of my CGI form handling in perl. But I've noticed that there is a way to put a small rich text editor into a web page input form. For example, this is done with yahoo mail. I've also seen it done with .NET stuff. I'm wondering if anyone knows how to do this? And of course, how to handle the output that these browser editors generate, maybe using cgi.pm? Thanks! __ Do you Yahoo!? U2 on LAUNCH - Exclusive greatest hits videos http://launch.yahoo.com/u2 ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs __ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Autos - Get free new car price quotes http://autos.yahoo.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: web form editor
http://webfx.eae.net/dhtml/richedit/richedit.html no module needed I believe... evething happens on the client side... -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:perl-win32-users-admin;listserv.ActiveState.com]On Behalf Of George Harris Sent: Monday, November 11, 2002 8:31 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: web form editor 2nd try: Does anybody know how these inline editors are created into a web page form, and if there are any perl modules to support this? Thanks. --- George Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All, I do all of my CGI form handling in perl. But I've noticed that there is a way to put a small rich text editor into a web page input form. For example, this is done with yahoo mail. I've also seen it done with .NET stuff. I'm wondering if anyone knows how to do this? And of course, how to handle the output that these browser editors generate, maybe using cgi.pm? Thanks! __ Do you Yahoo!? U2 on LAUNCH - Exclusive greatest hits videos http://launch.yahoo.com/u2 ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs __ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Autos - Get free new car price quotes http://autos.yahoo.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: web form editor
If it's a richedit control, then I would have to assume that there is an activeX thingy running it in IE. I'm almost 100% sure that this is not an html element. Check the win32::Ole::Browser (for some reason it's not willing to run on my box at the moment). I was playing around about 6 months ago, and ran across placing activeX controls in IE html pages. I'll see if I can find my test page that I was using. The thing that I remember thinking is wow this is cool, then wow, this would only work if people have this registered on their local box. If you are not providing the wrapper activeX and want to use this over the web for the general public, it's not a good idea if this is mission critical...but for an Intranet, would be cool. hth, JY -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:perl-win32-users-admin;listserv.ActiveState.com]On Behalf Of George Harris Sent: Monday, November 11, 2002 1:31 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: web form editor 2nd try: Does anybody know how these inline editors are created into a web page form, and if there are any perl modules to support this? Thanks. --- George Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All, I do all of my CGI form handling in perl. But I've noticed that there is a way to put a small rich text editor into a web page input form. For example, this is done with yahoo mail. I've also seen it done with .NET stuff. I'm wondering if anyone knows how to do this? And of course, how to handle the output that these browser editors generate, maybe using cgi.pm? Thanks! __ Do you Yahoo!? U2 on LAUNCH - Exclusive greatest hits videos http://launch.yahoo.com/u2 ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs __ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Autos - Get free new car price quotes http://autos.yahoo.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: web form editor
I know what your talking about. Cold Fusion does this really nicely with a bold and underline, italics, ect interface... But I don't think that perl has a module to do this. If your looking to send html email use the Mime::Lite module. From: George Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: web form editor Date: Mon, 11 Nov 2002 10:31:00 -0800 (PST) 2nd try: Does anybody know how these inline editors are created into a web page form, and if there are any perl modules to support this? Thanks. --- George Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All, I do all of my CGI form handling in perl. But I've noticed that there is a way to put a small rich text editor into a web page input form. For example, this is done with yahoo mail. I've also seen it done with .NET stuff. I'm wondering if anyone knows how to do this? And of course, how to handle the output that these browser editors generate, maybe using cgi.pm? Thanks! __ Do you Yahoo!? U2 on LAUNCH - Exclusive greatest hits videos http://launch.yahoo.com/u2 ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs __ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Autos - Get free new car price quotes http://autos.yahoo.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs _ The new MSN 8: advanced junk mail protection and 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: web form editor
Found what I was talking about. object classid=clsid:3B7C8860-D78F-101B-B9B5-04021C009402 width=320 height=240 /object placing that in an html file will add a richedit control 6.0 to the page. Burak Gürsoy's e-mail is what your looking for though. JY -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:perl-win32-users-admin;listserv.ActiveState.com]On Behalf Of George Harris Sent: Monday, November 11, 2002 1:31 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: web form editor 2nd try: Does anybody know how these inline editors are created into a web page form, and if there are any perl modules to support this? Thanks. --- George Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All, I do all of my CGI form handling in perl. But I've noticed that there is a way to put a small rich text editor into a web page input form. For example, this is done with yahoo mail. I've also seen it done with .NET stuff. I'm wondering if anyone knows how to do this? And of course, how to handle the output that these browser editors generate, maybe using cgi.pm? Thanks! __ Do you Yahoo!? U2 on LAUNCH - Exclusive greatest hits videos http://launch.yahoo.com/u2 ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs __ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Autos - Get free new car price quotes http://autos.yahoo.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Preferred PERL Editor
Hi folks, For those looking for something powerful (emacs-style), but are intimidated by sheer size of (X)Emacs on either Windows or Linux, I wholehartedly recommend Jasspa MicroEmacs (www.jasspa.com). It's GPLed, works on both platforms, and is rather small (can be squeezed to under 1MB for those tight on HD space). As a matter of fact, you can take a look at the headers of this mail to see that I'm also using it as my e-mail editor :-) BTW, it has Perl (and other) highlighting, and is thoroughly configurable (keystokes, general appearance, etc.). Naturally, I'm using it as my Perl editor of choice on Windows :-) It's definitely worth checking out if you're still looking for that *perfect* editor :-) Regards, Denis - -- Croatian Translation Language Services -- * dpleicATopen.hr + Denis Pleic | Phone: (+385) 42 305 751 M. Vrhovca 6 | Fax: (+385) 42 305 752 HR-42000 Varazdin| Mobile: (+385) 98 798 323 CROATIA | http://www.open.hr/~dpleic/indx-e.html ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Re: Preferred PERL Editor
The site URL is/was right but it seems to have got hacked or something ...i know this seems odder but try http://www.lost-sunglasses.de/ I just tried it and it seems to work -Original Message- From: Abner, Daniel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 11:58 PM To: 'Mark Bergeron'; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Re: Preferred PERL Editor Mark - The link you sent for open-perl-ide is not a perl site at all. It redirects you to a ridiculous site that has pop up window after pop up window. The content didn't appear to have anything to do with programming at all... Did you miss type the url? Dan. -Original Message- From: Mark Bergeron [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 2:43 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Re: Preferred PERL Editor I haven't ever used TextPad. But, I have used and are using; Crimson Edit (syntax highlighting, block and bracket matching and you can tie Perl right into it. it's free), NoteTab Light (fast, nicely customizable, not a lot of advanced features for the free one but hey! free). Then there is Open Perl IDE http://open-perl-ide.sorceforge.net. Win32 only I believe. Write code, debug code, etc... (also free). Between these I can get just about anything done. I've also used MultiEdit but that's gonna cost you 100 bucks or so. Not bad though. My 2 cents, Mark Bergeron -Original Message- From: Lee Goddard[EMAIL PROTECTED] To: John Deighan[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Fri May 10 01:48:24 PDT 2002 Subject: Re: Preferred PERL Editor At 13:01 09/05/2002 -0500, John Deighan wrote: I would vote for TextPad. However, I have a different twist on this question. Is there an editor, with similar features as TextPad and UltraEdit, that runs both on Windows and on Linux? That would be most useful to me. I guess XEmacs may be one, but I've never used it. Textpad have been promising such a version for over a year now :-( Lee Goddard perl -e while(1){print rand0.5 ? chr 47 : chr 92} ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs ___ GO.com Mail Get Your Free, Private E-mail at http://mail.go.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Preferred PERL Editor
Martin Moss wrote: Doesn't anybody still use VI these days?? :-) VI(M) - yes. Only thing always available on UNIX with a very good Win32 GUI port. Probably faster than any of the others and on more platforms. Emacs may be more powerful, but has a longer learning curve and not the best default key bindings (although you can change that). But if you know neither it might be the way to go for pure power. -- ,-/- __ _ _ $Bill Luebkert ICQ=14439852 (_/ / )// // DBE Collectibles Mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] / ) /-- o // // http://dbecoll.tripod.com/ (Free site for Perl) -/-' /___/__/_/_ Castle of Medieval Myth Magic http://www.todbe.com/ ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
Re: Preferred PERL Editor
Lee Goddard wrote: Also, no blinking bracket matching, doesn't understand qq{}, qw//, etc. What is blinking bracket matching? Xemacs blinks the matching bracket when your on the other match. It can find the next bracket fo the set if you use CTRL+M: holding down SHIFT at the same time highlights the block within the brackets I didn't know that - thanks for the tip! -- Simon Oliver ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
re: emacs Also, no blinking bracket matching, doesn't understand qq{}, qw//, etc. What is blinking bracket matching? Xemacs blinks the matching bracket when your on the other match. Xemacs also has other nifty features such as warning you of unmatched heredoc, brackets and incomplete regexen. Also you can take a document, set the perl mode to something like cperl-mode and then meta-ctrl-q on an opening brace to format the contents of the closure/sub/hash/etc to cperl-mode. Lovelly, then you can center the page on your current line using ctrl-*something* very nice. A. -- Aaron J Trevena, BSc (Hons) www.head2head.co.uk Internet Application Developer Perl, UNIX, IIS/ASP ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
Okay, where do I get Xemacs? Only kdding - getting it now... ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
Lee Goddard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote: Okay, where do I get Xemacs? Only kdding - getting it now... Welcome to the one true editor... :-) It's not an editor... its a lifestyle... though in the spirit of full disclosure, now that OS's have GUIs I do wander out of Emacs to do some stuff. bj ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
It's not an editor... its a lifestyle... though in the spirit of full disclosure, now that OS's have GUIs I do wander out of Emacs to do some stuff. Not to start YET ANOTHER RELIGIOUS WAR (YARW), but XEmacs does quite nicely on both Linux and Win32. So you can have your GUI and your EMACS, too. jpt ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
Doesn't anybody still use VI these days?? :-) Marty -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Tillman, James Sent: Friday 10 May 2002 15:37 To: 'Warkentin, Brad'; 'Lee Goddard'; Aaron Trevena; Simon Oliver Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Preferred PERL Editor It's not an editor... its a lifestyle... though in the spirit of full disclosure, now that OS's have GUIs I do wander out of Emacs to do some stuff. Not to start YET ANOTHER RELIGIOUS WAR (YARW), but XEmacs does quite nicely on both Linux and Win32. So you can have your GUI and your EMACS, too. jpt ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
Doesn't anybody still use VI these days?? :-) Strangely enough, I use vim for system admin tasks and Xemacs for coding. Talk about a schizo! Vim almost always installed on *nix and easy to get for Win32 via CygWin so having vim reflexes at the command line is handy, but I like Xemacs's version control interfaces and its other cool programmer toys. jpt ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
Martin Moss [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] ponders: Doesn't anybody still use VI these days?? :-) vim for quick and dirty (faster launch times), XEmacs for real editing bj ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
RE: Preferred PERL Editor
I find that VIM for windows is my preferred windows editor too:-) -Original Message- From: Warkentin, Brad [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday 10 May 2002 15:58 To: 'Martin Moss'; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Preferred PERL Editor Martin Moss [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] ponders: Doesn't anybody still use VI these days?? :-) vim for quick and dirty (faster launch times), XEmacs for real editing bj ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs
perl tk UI editor
Hi All, Does any one know any good UI editor for Perl Tk? Leo _ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
Re: perl tk UI editor
On 30.11.01 at 13:48 Leo Johan Susanto wrote: Does any one know any good UI editor for Perl Tk? Well, there's a new project on Sourceforge called Guido working on a new Perl/Tk gui builder. For now, I use SpecPerl/SpecTcl. See the Tcl website. It's at: scriptics.com Marcus ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
Re: what editor do you use?
There's also Emacs for windows (XEmacs is a fork of Emacs {the One True Editor}, for reasons probably too tedious to detail) which has similar functionality to Xemacs, including using the perl debugger in Emacs thru the Grand Unified Debugger. Although I've not yet gotten AS perl debugger to work with emacs :-( I use Emacs, so your statement isn't -strictly- true :-) Surely there must a FAQ for these things? At 26/06/2001 23:48:28, Ron Grabowski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: # It occurs to me now that I seem to be spending much of my day writing # Perl that I need a better programming environment than Notepad. # # People on the list use: # # Notepad # XEmacs for NT - me me me!!! # TextPad # UltraEdit # # XEmacs comes with built-in Perl syntax highlighting ( not just a list of # keywords that change colors ) along with auto-tab-indent, word-complition # ESC-/ ), the ability to open new frames and window on the fly from the # keyboard, and you can completely turn off the menus for more work space. # # - Ron # # # ___ # Perl-Win32-Users mailing list # [EMAIL PROTECTED] # http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users # Roger ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
RE: what editor do you use?
A nice, light IDE that I use at work is Perl Builder available from www.solutionsoft.comIt's not free, but it has everything I need, and it's performance is much better than the alternatives I've tried. Steve Howard -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Mark Bergeron Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 6:00 PM To: Debbie Thomson; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: what editor do you use? If you want it for free... Note Tab Light If you want to pay... Multi-Edit 9.0 If your a developer... Komodo (from Active State free/pay) a bit slow though )-8 -Original Message- From: Debbie Thomson[EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Tue Jun 26 09:17:21 PDT 2001 Subject: what editor do you use? All- It occurs to me now that I seem to be spending much of my day writing Perl that I need a better programming environment than Notepad. What do you use? Thanks, Deb /~_. _ | _ _ _ _ \_/|(_||| | |(_)| | _| ___ GO.com Mail Get Your Free, Private E-mail at http://mail.go.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
FW: what editor do you use?
-Original Message- From: abe miller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 5:22 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: what editor do you use? I have found the free PFE editor to work like a champ. I am an old timer from the MS-DOS days, and have found the PFE convenient for editing PERL scripts, then escaping to DOS to execute the script at the command line. If you are a command line oriented person, you will know what I mean. I have been working with PERL for the past 8 months, and found it a great scripting language for distributed process (FTP, and TELNET), and also a great analytical tool for searching through downloaded libraries of mainframe COBOL programs (UNISYS). I have developed scripts that allow my users to download reports generated on our UNISYS mainframe. I also use an old DOS editor, QEDIT that I have used for the past 10 years. Just a great editor for my COBOL programs, and with its sorting and rectangular blocking, allows me to manipulate programs and data at will. (This editor has a shareware version from SYMWARE). Abraham Miller From: Wilson, Brent [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: 'Debbie Thomson' [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: what editor do you use? Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 16:03:48 -0700 I use XEmacs (http://www.xemacs.org) and CodeWright (http://www.starbase.com) -Original Message- From: Debbie Thomson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 9:17 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: what editor do you use? All- It occurs to me now that I seem to be spending much of my day writing Perl that I need a better programming environment than Notepad. What do you use? Thanks, Deb ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users _ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
RE: what editor do you use?
Ron - add SciTE from Scintilla.org to the list Notepad XEmacs for NT - me me me!!! TextPad UltraEdit snip ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
RE: what editor do you use?
For doing awk, shell scripts, SAS, and perl: Gnu Emacs. I've tried XEmacs, but there were some minor quirks that annoyed me (but that certainly don't annoy most people). Emacs (of any flavor) is a pain in the ass to learn, but it's such a useful tool that it's worth it, IMHO. And it's available on all OSes. E.g.: I was pulling codes for footnotes from a large document and putting these codes in a second document. It was a breeze. Then I wanted to delete duplicate lines... No uniq option in Emacs, but Emacs will support Unix utility ports. So, I found uniq on the web, downloaded, put it in the right directory, and ran it from Emacs. That sort of thing. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Debbie Thomson Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 12:17 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: what editor do you use? All- It occurs to me now that I seem to be spending much of my day writing Perl that I need a better programming environment than Notepad. What do you use? Thanks, Deb ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
RE: what editor do you use?
I use Multi-Edit. Without going into the myriad of features, I will say this: It has done whatever I need, regardless of what I'm editing. It handles Perl, Unix shell files, HTML, Java, JavaScript, DOS Batch files, and everything else I have *ever* edited. I've even used it to fix damaged Word and WordPerfect files, since it can handle binary files (of any size) as easily as text files. You can call compilers from it, shell out to run other programs, and the two best features of all (IMHO)... 1.) You can easily (without coding) assign nearly any function/action to any key or key combination so you can emulate any keyboard layouts you might like (brief, word, wordstar, wordperfect, or anything else) 2.) If there's a feature you wish it had, there is a robust macro language that lets you write anything you want. (As a related aside, most of the editor functions are written in the macro language, and they give you the source!) check it out at http://www.multiedit.com Regards, Rick Evans -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Debbie Thomson Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2001 10:17 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: what editor do you use? All- It occurs to me now that I seem to be spending much of my day writing Perl that I need a better programming environment than Notepad. What do you use? Thanks, Deb ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
Re: what editor do you use?
Gotta put in a plug for my favorite, EditPlus, found at: www.editplus.com just a few benefits... manages projects, paste in cliptext clips, syntax highlighting (editable addins for more languages), global regex search and replace (plus searching drives for files using regexen), built-in web browser, run scripts from within editor (captured or command window), and many more... DT All- DT It occurs to me now that I seem to be spending much of my day writing DT Perl that I need a better programming environment than Notepad. DT What do you use? DT Thanks, DT Deb Best regards, ryddler [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.cu-online.com/~ryddler/conquest ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
Re: what editor do you use?
OptiPerl is a very cool perl IDE from http://www.xarka.com/optiperl I use it daily. -- Kelly [EMAIL PROTECTED] All- It occurs to me now that I seem to be spending much of my day writing Perl that I need a better programming environment than Notepad. What do you use? Thanks, Deb ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
Re: what editor do you use?
Hello: It's not exactly an editor, but it could be useful! http://www.qadram.com Best Regards QaDRAM, RAD development for the WEB http://www.qadram.com ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
Re: Server Signature (was RE: Perl Editor Part II)
Ed Moon wrote: If the ISP is running Apache as the webserver, you can modify the Server Signature code (in the source) to report whatever you want. It's also possible that an Apache module that adds Frontpage support has mangled the server signature. It's also possible I will make a million dollars tomorrow. :) -- ,-/- __ _ _ $Bill Luebkert ICQ=14439852 (_/ / )// // DBE Collectibles http://www.wgn.net/~dbe/ / ) /-- o // // Mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://dbecoll.webjump.com/ -/-' /___/__/_/_http://www.freeyellow.com/members/dbecoll/ ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users
RE: Perl-Editor
i am using the UltraEditor-32 embeded with Active Perl 5.6. UltraEdit-32 is a good text editor on Win32, it has syntax sensitive to C, Perl and other language. while Active Perl 5.6 provides a good development tools including a visual debugger. (run "perl.exe -d") Li Lian __ Do You Yahoo!? From homework help to love advice, Yahoo! Experts has your answer. http://experts.yahoo.com/ ___ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/listinfo/perl-win32-users