Differences between version 2 and predecessor to the previous major change of perlfaq3(1).
Other diffs: Previous Revision, Previous Author, or view the Annotated Edit History
Newer page: | version 2 | Last edited on Tuesday, June 4, 2002 12:22:33 am | by perry | Revert |
Older page: | version 1 | Last edited on Tuesday, June 4, 2002 12:22:33 am | by perry | Revert |
@@ -207,15 +207,15 @@
Komodo
-ActiveState's cross-platform, multi-language
+!
ActiveState's cross-platform, multi-language
IDE has Perl support, including a regular
expression debugger and remote debugging
-(http://www.ActiveState.com/Products/Komodo/index.html).
+(http://www.!
ActiveState.com/Products/Komodo/index.html).
(Visual Perl, a Visual Studio.NET plug-in is currently
(early 2001) in beta
-(http://www.ActiveState.com/Products/VisualPerl/index.html)).
+(http://www.!
ActiveState.com/Products/!
VisualPerl/index.html)).
The Object System
@@ -223,9 +223,9 @@
(http://www.castlelink.co.uk/object_system/) is a Perl web
applications development IDE .
-PerlBuilder
+!
PerlBuilder
(http://www.solutionsoft.com/perl.htm) is an integrated
development environment for Windows that supports Perl
@@ -323,15 +323,15 @@
http://www.starbase.com/
-MultiEdit
+!
MultiEdit
-http://www.MultiEdit.com/
+http://www.!
MultiEdit.com/
-SlickEdit
+!
SlickEdit
http://www.slickedit.com/
@@ -395,11 +395,11 @@
ASCII mode so the ends of lines are
appropriately converted.
-On Mac OS the MacPerl Application comes with
+On Mac OS the !
MacPerl Application comes with
a simple 32k text editor that behaves like a rudimentary
-IDE . In contrast to the MacPerl Application
+IDE . In contrast to the !
MacPerl Application
the MPW Perl tool can make use of the
MPW Shell itself as an editor (with no 32k
limit).
@@ -524,9 +524,9 @@
hardware.
A different approach is to autoload seldom-used Perl code.
-See the AutoSplit and AutoLoader modules in the standard
+See the !
AutoSplit and !
AutoLoader modules in the standard
distribution for that. Or you could locate the bottleneck
and think about writing just that part in C, the way we used
to take bottlenecks in C code and write them in assembler.
Similar to rewriting in C, modules that have critical
@@ -586,9 +586,9 @@
simulate arrays can be highly beneficial. For example, an
array of a thousand booleans will take at least 20,000 bytes
of space, but it can be turned into one 125-byte bit
vector--a considerable memory savings. The standard
-Tie::SubstrHash module can also help for certain types of
+Tie::!
SubstrHash module can also help for certain types of
data structure. If you're working with specialist data
structures (matrices, for instance) modules that implement
these in C may use less memory than equivalent Perl
modules.
@@ -838,9 +838,9 @@
extproc perl -S -your_switches
as the first line in *.cmd file (-S due to a bug in cmd.exe's `extproc' handling). For DOS one should first invent a corresponding batch file and codify it in ALTERNATIVE_SHEBANG (see the ''INSTALL'' file in the source distribution for more information).
-The Win95/NT installation, when using the ActiveState port
+The Win95/NT installation, when using the !
ActiveState port
of Perl, will modify the Registry to associate the
.pl extension with the perl interpreter. If you
install another port, perhaps even building your own
Win95/NT Perl from the standard sources by using a Windows
@@ -917,9 +917,9 @@
The problem is that none of these examples are reliable: they depend on the command interpreter. Under Unix, the first two often work. Under DOS , it's entirely possible that neither works. If 4DOS was the command shell, you'd probably have better luck like this:
perl -e
-Under the Mac, it depends which environment you are using. The MacPerl shell, or MPW , is much like Unix shells in its support for several quoting variants, except that it makes free use of the Mac's non-ASCII characters as control characters.
+Under the Mac, it depends which environment you are using. The !
MacPerl shell, or MPW , is much like Unix shells in its support for several quoting variants, except that it makes free use of the Mac's non-ASCII characters as control characters.
Using ''qq()'', q(), and ''qx()'', instead of ``double
quotes'', 'single quotes', and `backticks`, may make
@@ -957,9 +957,9 @@
HTTP Spec
http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Protocols/HTTP/
HTML Spec
http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/
-http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/MarkUp/
+http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/!
MarkUp/
CGI Spec
http://www.w3.org/CGI/
CGI Security FAQ
http://www.go2net.com/people/paulp/cgi-security/safe-cgi.txt
@@ -992,9 +992,9 @@
perl in my C program; what am I doing
wrong?__
-Download the ExtUtils::Embed kit from CPAN
+Download the !
ExtUtils::Embed kit from CPAN
and run `make test'. If the tests pass, read the pods again
and again and again. If they fail, see perlbug and send a
bug report with the output of make test
TEST_VERBOSE=1 along with perl
@@ -1021,15 +1021,15 @@
use diagnostics -verbose;
-__What's MakeMaker?__
+__What's !
MakeMaker?__
This module (part of the standard Perl distribution) is
designed to write a Makefile for an extension module from a
Makefile.PL. For more information, see
-ExtUtils::MakeMaker.
+!
ExtUtils::!
MakeMaker.
!!AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1997-1999 Tom Christiansen and Nathan