Edited by Jon Orwant
First Edition
November 2002
Pages: 758
ISBN 10: 0-596-00310-2 |
ISBN 13: 9780596003104
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(Average of 3 Customer Reviews)
The first of three volumes from the archives of The Perl Journal that O'Reilly has exclusive rights to distribute, this book is a compilation of the best from TPJ: 71 articles providing a comprehensive tour of how experts implement computer science concepts in the real world, with code walkthroughs, case studies, and explanations of difficult techniques that can't be found in any other book.
Full Description
- Jeffrey Friedl on Understanding Regexes
- Mark Jason Dominus on optimizing your Perl programs with Memoization
- Damian Conway on Parsing
- Tim Meadowcroft on integrating Perl with Microsoft Office
- Larry Wall on the culture of Perl
Cover | Table of Contents | Colophon
Featured customer reviews
Computer Science & Perl Programming Review, February 29 2004
This book is a real pleasure to read. The author gives just the right amount of details of perl programmig... Highly recommended!
Kate Lea
Computer Science & Perl Programming Review, December 20 2002
Very well-written and informative. I've been coding Perl for four years now, and this text is one of the best I've seen.
Computer Science & Perl Programming Review, April 05 2002
Uitstekend!
Media reviews
"I think all three would be a marvelous addition to any decent tech library - they seem perfect for a library as they have all the benefits of a five year collection of TPJ without the problems of magazine storage, cataloging and conservation."
--Tony Williams, Slashdot, January 2004
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/01/26/1938234
"All in all, a great read and a great reference to keep around. I would definitely advise anyone interested in Perl to pick up this set; you won't regret it."
-- IEEE and ACM Clubs at Colorado Technical University, May 2004
"The Perl community is amazing and some of its most eloquent voices wrote articles for this book. Reading their articles helps one see that Perl can be much more than a tool for simple shell scripts."
--Provo Linux Users Group, April 2004
http://plug.org/archive/000012.html







