[Boston.pm] Social Meeting, Tuesday, August 21, at Cambridge Brewing Co

2007-08-17 Thread Ronald J Kimball
Boston.pm will have a social meeting this coming Tuesday, August 21, at Cambridge Brewing Company in Kendall Square. We'll start at 7:30 and end when everybody leaves. http://www.cambrew.com/ The appetizers for this meeting will be generously sponsored by JohnGalt Staffing, a technical

Re: [Boston.pm] Social Meeting in August

2007-08-17 Thread Ronald J Kimball
It looks like Cambridge Brewing Company is the favorite, so that's where we'll go next week. Announcement to follow. Keep in mind the other suggestions for the next social meeting! Maybe some time in September? (If someone wanted to volunteer to oversee organizing the social meetings that

Re: [Boston.pm] refactoring tools and IDEs

2007-08-17 Thread Richard J. Barbalace
Hi. Quoting Bob Rogers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > From: "Richard J. Barbalace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sure, you can write fine code with just a text editor, but it might > not be as easy, fast, or efficient as with an IDE. It would be nice > if there were a good one for Perl > > Have

Re: [Boston.pm] refactoring tools and IDEs

2007-08-17 Thread David Cantrell
On Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 08:35:00AM -0400, Bob Rogers wrote: > From: David Cantrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Piers Cawley was working on some perly refactoring thingy in emacs > > several years ago, but I don't think he got very far at the time. Now > > that PPI exists maybe someone else could give

Re: [Boston.pm] refactoring tools and IDEs

2007-08-17 Thread Bob Rogers
From: David Cantrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Fri, 17 Aug 2007 12:55:35 +0100 On Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 01:52:07AM -0400, Jeremy Muhlich wrote: > I agree with David -- I think the entire Perl ecosystem has been > structured in such a way that the shell + editor + cpan approach

Re: [Boston.pm] refactoring tools and IDEs

2007-08-17 Thread David Cantrell
On Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 01:52:07AM -0400, Jeremy Muhlich wrote: > I agree with David -- I think the entire Perl ecosystem has been > structured in such a way that the shell + editor + cpan approach just > fits perfectly. I've never felt anything really "painful" in Perl > development,