[20000] in Perl-Users-Digest
Perl-Users Digest, Issue: 2195 Volume: 10
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Sat Nov 24 09:05:31 2001
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 06:05:09 -0800 (PST)
From: Perl-Users Digest <Perl-Users-Request@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU>
To: Perl-Users@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Message-Id: <1006610709-v10-i2195@ruby.oce.orst.edu>
Content-Type: text
Perl-Users Digest Sat, 24 Nov 2001 Volume: 10 Number: 2195
Today's topics:
Bizarre languages ( was Re: Best language for low IQ pr <israelrt@optushome.com.au>
Re: Bizarre languages ( was Re: Best language for low I (J French)
Re: Enigma encryption <mgjv@tradingpost.com.au>
exec() and system() <coredumped@elrodri.com>
Re: External perl script (Joe Smith)
Re: File position of of every word in a file <mgjv@tradingpost.com.au>
Re: I can't figure out this syntax error <bart.lateur@pandora.be>
Re: I would like to call the perl from java (Charles DeRykus)
question about exact match <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Re: question about exact match <wuerz@yahoo.com>
Re: question about exact match <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Re: question about exact match <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
Re: question about exact match <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Re: question about exact match <wuerz@yahoo.com>
Re: question about exact match <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
Re: question about exact match (F. Xavier Noria)
question for array operation <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Re: question for array operation <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
Re: question for array operation <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Re: question for array operation <wuerz@yahoo.com>
Re: question for array operation <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
returning keys of a tree hashed array????? <no.th@nk.you>
Re: returning keys of a tree hashed array????? (Eric Bohlman)
signature error (was: Re: Difficulty with references an (Wojtek Walczak)
Thank s! (was Re: Script for stripping FONT (HTML) tags (Sasa Janiska)
Re: Traversing directories <rafalk@home.com>
Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01) (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 20:58:43 +1100
From: IsraelRT <israelrt@optushome.com.au>
Subject: Bizarre languages ( was Re: Best language for low IQ programmers? )
Message-Id: <mequvt8kgg8tl7mvr39jkfptcvbb7uk23n@4ax.com>
On Fri, 23 Nov 2001 20:34:20 -0500, Gregor <gg@gg.net> wrote:
>As a professional web developer, I would have to say LOGO is the wave
>of the future. LOGO is an unappreciated language and easy to learn!
>It's so fun to watch the turtle running around my Atari Mega ST4's
>screen! A few easy commands and you're ready to go.
>Avoid at all costs C++, Java, Visual Basic, JavaScript/VBscript, and
>PERL. These languages are the tools of the US military/industrial
>complex that controls the W3 and are only truly understood by
>operatives of the CIA, NSA and FBI.
Intercal is the True Way.
http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/intercal/
The only programming language with the COME FROM , if you write your
programs in Intercal you can be forever sure that you as the
programmer will have absolute job security...
Alternatively, for the truly inspired, there are Threaded Intercal
("All communication between threads is done by turning on and off
lines of the shared code base." ) and Unlambda ***
http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~malcolmr/threaded_intercal.html
http://www.eleves.ens.fr:8080/home/madore/programs/unlambda/
**" The effect of reading an Unlambda program is like habing
your brains smashed out by a Lisp sexp wrapped around an ENIAC. You
won't find anything like it west of Alpha Centauri.
The Hitch-Hacker's Guide to Programming"
"the following Unlambda program
calculates and prints the Fibonacci numbers (as lines of
asterisks)
```s``s``sii`ki
`k.*``s``s`ks
``s`k`s`ks``s``s`ks``s`k`s`kr``s`k`sikk
`k``s`ksk
"
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 12:21:35 GMT
From: jerry@iss.u-net.com (J French)
Subject: Re: Bizarre languages ( was Re: Best language for low IQ programmers? )
Message-Id: <3bff8f70.3989031@news.u-net.com>
On Sat, 24 Nov 2001 20:58:43 +1100, IsraelRT
<israelrt@optushome.com.au> wrote:
<snip>
Looks a bit like APL to me !
>**" The effect of reading an Unlambda program is like habing
>your brains smashed out by a Lisp sexp wrapped around an ENIAC. You
>won't find anything like it west of Alpha Centauri.
>The Hitch-Hacker's Guide to Programming"
>
>"the following Unlambda program
>calculates and prints the Fibonacci numbers (as lines of
>asterisks)
>
>```s``s``sii`ki
> `k.*``s``s`ks
> ``s`k`s`ks``s``s`ks``s`k`s`kr``s`k`sikk
> `k``s`ksk
>
>"
>
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 19:27:10 +1100
From: Martien Verbruggen <mgjv@tradingpost.com.au>
Subject: Re: Enigma encryption
Message-Id: <slrn9vumeu.to2.mgjv@martien.heliotrope.home>
On Fri, 23 Nov 2001 20:08:00 -0800,
Godzilla! <godzilla@stomp.stomp.tokyo> wrote:
>> output of a time command.
>
> As you know, I use benchmark very frequently. It is
> fairly decent module which is a high compliment from
> me; my opinion is almost all modules totally suck.
> Truth is, almost all modules are cargo cult crap.
Good thing we have you to provide us all with your high-quality code
that gratuitously calls external programs, and is as platform dependent
as Microsoft IE.
Pity you don't put your code on CPAN, so that the average
quality of publicly available code would go up in leaps and bounds.
Maybe you could even write some modules, so that there are at least one
or two decent ones.
Thanks for your graceful efforts.
Martien
--
Do not pay any attention to what Godzilla says. It is a troll, and has
no decent working knowledge of Perl or programming in general. Search
groups.google.com to see a history of its posts and replies to these posts.
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2001 14:47:51 GMT
From: Patrick Bateman <coredumped@elrodri.com>
Subject: exec() and system()
Message-Id: <r8PK7.176532$zG3.531820@telenews.teleline.es>
Hi:
Is there anyway to disable system() and exec() functions on a system
running linux? I don't want cgi's can use this functions. I already tryed
suexec and it doesn't seems to work.
Thanks in advance.
PGP Key:
http://pgpkeys.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=rodrigo%40metropoli2000.com
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 11:48:08 GMT
From: inwap@best.com (Joe Smith)
Subject: Re: External perl script
Message-Id: <YNLL7.5$He.725@sea-read.news.verio.net>
In article <9tmr06$4bs$1@neptunium.btinternet.com>,
Neil Black <neil.black@btinternet.com> wrote:
>is it possible to include a perl script into
>another script on the same server?
Check the perl docs for:
do "filename.cgi";
require "filename.cgi";
$_ = `filename.cgi`; # qx()
system "filename.cgi";
--
See http://www.inwap.com/ for PDP-10 and "ReBoot" pages.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 19:28:58 +1100
From: Martien Verbruggen <mgjv@tradingpost.com.au>
Subject: Re: File position of of every word in a file
Message-Id: <slrn9vumia.to2.mgjv@martien.heliotrope.home>
On Fri, 23 Nov 2001 20:27:03 -0800,
Godzilla! <godzilla@stomp.stomp.tokyo> wrote:
> Godzilla! wrote:
>
>> Rob van Strien wrote:
>
> (snipped)
>
>> > How can I get the file position of each single word in a file?
>
>> This is a pretty tough problem. You will discover tossing
>> together a script to do this, to be a formidable task.
>
>
> This one has kept my interest for a bit. Here is a cleaned
> up version of my previous test script for you.
It is still a vile piece of crap, even after the cleanup.
Martien
--
Do not pay any attention to what Godzilla says. It is a troll, and has
no decent working knowledge of Perl or programming in general. Search
groups.google.com to see a history of its posts and replies to these posts.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 09:47:16 GMT
From: Bart Lateur <bart.lateur@pandora.be>
Subject: Re: I can't figure out this syntax error
Message-Id: <r0ruvt8gvhen39u4ssloq89oiabasu6fjt@4ax.com>
mike wrote:
>$head = "C:\Xitami\Pat-Acceptance\LAX\Head.txt";
>$body = "C:\Xitami\Pat-Acceptance\LAX\Body.txt";
>$tail = "C:\Xitami\Pat-Acceptance\LAX\Tail.txt";
>$gifts = "C:\Xitami\Pat-Acceptance\LAX\Gifts.html";
Don't use bare backslashes for path separators. Just print out what you
assigned to the variables, and you'll see somehting you didn't expect.
Either double the backslashes, or make forward slashes of them.
>%postInputs = readPostInput()
>
>open (BODY, ">>$body");
...
>The error message I'm getting is this:
>
>C:\Xitami\cgi-bin>perl readInput.pl
>syntax error at readInput.pl line 9, near ")
This one always trips me up: you forgot the semicolon at the end of the
first of the two statements. Get used to look out for it.
--
Bart.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 09:54:45 GMT
From: ced@bcstec.ca.boeing.com (Charles DeRykus)
Subject: Re: I would like to call the perl from java
Message-Id: <GnAu79.35F@news.boeing.com>
In article <3bfcd64e.3028916101@News.CIS.DFN.DE>,
Helgi Briem <helgi@decode.is> wrote:
>On Fri, 16 Nov 2001 00:13:42 GMT, JOSE <DOBLEJ@teleline.es>
>wrote:
>
>>I would like to call the perl function from java.
>>How?
>
>Ask somebody who does java how to make
>a system call. Then do it like that. This
>question is off-topic form this newsgroup.
Actually not offtopic in this case. Larry's venerable JPL
cross compiler allows you to embed Perl within Java and
comes with Perl 5.6.1. Or, for older Perl's, see:
search.cpan.org/search?dist=JPL
O'Reilly's site has some of the original docs:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/prkunix/excerpt/UGch03.html
(Warning: Jarkko's patch to make JPL work with jdk's 1.2/3
didn't appear until Perl 5.8 so you'll need to either use
jdk1.1 or patch and rebuild Perl. You can find the patch by
searching for JPL on Googol.)
--
Charles DeRykus
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 18:34:35 -0800
From: "Ryan" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Subject: question about exact match
Message-Id: <9tnsl7$hnm$1@eng-ser1.erg.cuhk.edu.hk>
Hello,
I want to search a word,eg.boy in a paragraph. However, I don't want the
result returned have eg.cowboy, boycott... I just focus on the exact match
of boy. So, what is the regular expression?
I try to do this but not work:
if ($_ =~ m/boy/gi){...}
Thank you~
------------------------------
Date: 24 Nov 2001 05:43:43 -0500
From: Mona Wuerz <wuerz@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: question about exact match
Message-Id: <m3pu68bg9s.fsf@DCCMBX01.njitdm.campus.njit.edu>
"Ryan" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk> writes:
> I want to search a word,eg.boy in a paragraph. However, I don't want the
> result returned have eg.cowboy, boycott... I just focus on the exact match
> of boy. So, what is the regular expression?
> I try to do this but not work:
> if ($_ =~ m/boy/gi){...}
^^^^^^^ ^ -- these are redundant here
You want word boundaries (\b). Read about them in perlre. Try:
if (/\bboy\b/i) {...}
--
$_="\n,rekcah egnufeB rehtona tsuJ";#v1<?>g\:pv-<5<
s s\S+(?:B)sunpack'u',q q$;')E4qsee;#>60#^<(v!<)g6<
print scalar reverse,$@ unless m,[+;#]55,;m:_,:#^1<
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 19:29:20 -0800
From: "Ryan" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Subject: Re: question about exact match
Message-Id: <9tnvrs$jau$1@eng-ser1.erg.cuhk.edu.hk>
Thank you!
But for now, it also matches the word for eg. barrow-boy.Then how can i also
filter out for this case?
"Mona Wuerz" <wuerz@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:m3pu68bg9s.fsf@DCCMBX01.njitdm.campus.njit.edu...
> "Ryan" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk> writes:
>
> > I want to search a word,eg.boy in a paragraph. However, I don't want the
> > result returned have eg.cowboy, boycott... I just focus on the exact
match
> > of boy. So, what is the regular expression?
> > I try to do this but not work:
> > if ($_ =~ m/boy/gi){...}
> ^^^^^^^ ^ -- these are redundant here
>
> You want word boundaries (\b). Read about them in perlre. Try:
>
> if (/\bboy\b/i) {...}
>
> --
> $_="\n,rekcah egnufeB rehtona tsuJ";#v1<?>g\:pv-<5<
> s s\S+(?:B)sunpack'u',q q$;')E4qsee;#>60#^<(v!<)g6<
> print scalar reverse,$@ unless m,[+;#]55,;m:_,:#^1<
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 12:45:59 +0100
From: Laocoon <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
Subject: Re: question about exact match
Message-Id: <Xns916381F14F0B0Laocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134>
if($blah =~ /\s+boy\s+/i) {...}
Lao
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 20:05:58 -0800
From: "Kit" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Subject: Re: question about exact match
Message-Id: <9to20h$khk$1@eng-ser1.erg.cuhk.edu.hk>
Thank you very much!
"Laocoon" <Laocoon@eudoramail.com> wrote in message
news:Xns916381F14F0B0Laocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134...
> if($blah =~ /\s+boy\s+/i) {...}
>
> Lao
------------------------------
Date: 24 Nov 2001 07:14:55 -0500
From: Mona Wuerz <wuerz@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: question about exact match
Message-Id: <m3lmgwbc1s.fsf@DCCMBX01.njitdm.campus.njit.edu>
Laocoon <Laocoon@eudoramail.com> writes:
> if($blah =~ /\s+boy\s+/i) {...}
$blah = 'Boy, does that even correctly catch "boy?"';
To the OP: If dashes are a problem it gets more tricky.
$blah = 'For example, what about boy-girl issues?';
*If* you can exclude cases like this in your logic, you can use
look-ahead and look-behind assertions. For example, you could say:
if ($blah =~ /(?<![\w-])boy(?![\w-])/i) {...}
Read about look-ahead and look-behind in perlre.
(And please don't top-post).
--
$_="\n,rekcah egnufeB rehtona tsuJ";#v1<?>g\:pv-<5<
s s\S+(?:B)sunpack'u',q q$;')E4qsee;#>60#^<(v!<)g6<
print scalar reverse,$@ unless m,[+;#]55,;m:_,:#^1<
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 13:27:06 +0100
From: Laocoon <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
Subject: Re: question about exact match
Message-Id: <Xns916388EA8F00CLaocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134>
We don't know if its supposed to catch '"boy"'.
if($blah =~ /(\s|^)boy(\s|$)/i) {...}
------------------------------
Date: 24 Nov 2001 12:35:30 GMT
From: fxn@retemail.es (F. Xavier Noria)
Subject: Re: question about exact match
Message-Id: <9to46i$4se095@news1s.iddeo2.es>
On Sat, 24 Nov 2001 18:34:35 -0800, Ryan <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk> wrote:
: I want to search a word,eg.boy in a paragraph. However, I don't want the
: result returned have eg.cowboy, boycott... I just focus on the exact match
: of boy. So, what is the regular expression?
: I try to do this but not work:
: if ($_ =~ m/boy/gi){...}
perldoc perlre
/word boundary
-- fxn
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 19:53:11 -0800
From: "Kit" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Subject: question for array operation
Message-Id: <9to18j$k9a$1@eng-ser1.erg.cuhk.edu.hk>
Dears,
I want to ask if i can delete a element in a array?
eg.@abc=(cat,dog,chicken). Can i use any function to delete "dog" so that
@abc=(cat,chicken)?
Thanks.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 13:01:55 +0100
From: Laocoon <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
Subject: Re: question for array operation
Message-Id: <Xns916384A54DC18Laocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134>
perldoc -f delete
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 20:19:17 -0800
From: "Kit" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk>
Subject: Re: question for array operation
Message-Id: <9to2ph$kr9$1@eng-ser1.erg.cuhk.edu.hk>
Thx~ But is it apply to hash only?
"Laocoon" <Laocoon@eudoramail.com> wrote in message
news:Xns916384A54DC18Laocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134...
> perldoc -f delete
------------------------------
Date: 24 Nov 2001 07:29:20 -0500
From: Mona Wuerz <wuerz@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: question for array operation
Message-Id: <m3herkbbdr.fsf@DCCMBX01.njitdm.campus.njit.edu>
"Kit" <hkyeung9@ie.cuhk.edu.hk> writes:
[ Please don't top post.
Text rearranged. ]
> "Laocoon" <Laocoon@eudoramail.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns916384A54DC18Laocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134...
> > perldoc -f delete
>
> Thx~ But is it apply to hash only?
Besides the fact that you probably want splice instead of delete,
what did `perldoc -f delete' have to say on this issue?
--
$_="\n,rekcah egnufeB rehtona tsuJ";#v1<?>g\:pv-<5<
s s\S+(?:B)sunpack'u',q q$;')E4qsee;#>60#^<(v!<)g6<
print scalar reverse,$@ unless m,[+;#]55,;m:_,:#^1<
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 13:29:56 +0100
From: Laocoon <Laocoon@eudoramail.com>
Subject: Re: question for array operation
Message-Id: <Xns9163896500Laocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134>
> Thx~ But is it apply to hash only?
> "Laocoon" <Laocoon@eudoramail.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns916384A54DC18Laocooneudoramailcom@62.153.159.134...
>> perldoc -f delete
>
Why don't you just read it ?
@array = qw(cat dog bird);
delete $array[2];
print @array; # prints catdog
Lao
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 11:54:46 -0800
From: "martin" <no.th@nk.you>
Subject: returning keys of a tree hashed array?????
Message-Id: <3bff898f$1_2@mk-nntp-1.news.uk.worldonline.com>
the "keys" command will return all keys of a hashed array....but how can i
find the keys of a branched/tree array, at a certain branch??
so if i had:
{dog}{brown}{fat}=1
{dog}{brown}{thin}=2
{dog}{white}{fat}=1
{dog}{blue}{thin}=3
{cat}....etc
and i want to return the keys within the {dog}{brown} branch...(the answer
being [fat] and [thin]) how would i do that?
------------------------------
Date: 24 Nov 2001 12:44:51 GMT
From: ebohlman@omsdev.com (Eric Bohlman)
Subject: Re: returning keys of a tree hashed array?????
Message-Id: <9to4o3$dcj$1@bob.news.rcn.net>
martin <no.th@nk.you> wrote:
> the "keys" command will return all keys of a hashed array....but how can i
> find the keys of a branched/tree array, at a certain branch??
> so if i had:
> {dog}{brown}{fat}=1
> {dog}{brown}{thin}=2
> {dog}{white}{fat}=1
> {dog}{blue}{thin}=3
> {cat}....etc
> and i want to return the keys within the {dog}{brown} branch...(the answer
> being [fat] and [thin]) how would i do that?
Just remember that a "multi-dimensional" hash is actually a hash of
references to hashes, so the value of $hash{dog}{brown} is a reference to
a hash with keys like "fat" and "thin." You just grab that value,
dereference it, and apply keys() to the result:
my @keylist = keys %{$hash{dog}{brown}};
------------------------------
Date: 24 Nov 2001 11:45:07 GMT
From: gminick@hacker.pl (Wojtek Walczak)
Subject: signature error (was: Re: Difficulty with references and hashes) ;)
Message-Id: <slrn9vuuc9.di.gminick@hannibal.localdomain>
Dnia Fri, 23 Nov 2001 19:44:23 +0100, Steffen Müller napisa³(a):
>$_=q;0cb212c210b0bb010c0113bb0c410c0b516c0bb3d212c2b0b0b016b6cb2b2c21010c0
>b41110b3bba0e0c0d2c4b2b6bc013d2c0d0b01012b0b0;;s/\n//g;s/(\d)/$1<2?$1:'0'x
>$1/ge;s/([a-f])/'1'x(ord($1)-97)/ge;$o=$_;push@o,substr($o,$_*8,8) for(0..
>24);for(@o){print"\0"x(26-$i).chr(oct('0b'.($_)))."\r";$i++};print"\n"#stm
perl5.6.1 & slackware8.0
somenthing's wrong here, because your signature prints only
one letter - 'J' ;>
--
[ Wojtek gminick Walczak ][ http://hacker.pl/gminick/ ]
[ gminick (at) hacker.pl ][ gminick (at) klub.chip.pl ]
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 10:00:35 +0100
From: ggd@gaura.nitai.hr (Sasa Janiska)
Subject: Thank s! (was Re: Script for stripping FONT (HTML) tags)
Message-Id: <slrn9vuodj.b1i.ggd@gaura.nitai.hr>
Thanks to all of you who replied to my question.
The link for HTML-Kit did a nice job, and scripts for stripping FONT
tags are now in use for some other tags also :-))
Sincerely,
Sasa
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2001 12:02:07 GMT
From: Rafal Konopka <rafalk@home.com>
Subject: Re: Traversing directories
Message-Id: <3BFF8EBB.78438817@home.com>
Tad McClellan wrote:
> Upgrade!
>
I will, but it's not that simple. To give you an example. On my office
machine, I have 5.6.?. Being an SGML consultant, you're probably
familiar with Chrystal Astoria DMS. I requested from them the Perl API
to Astoria and guess what: according to their guys, the Perl API has
been tested and works with 5_2_2. On 5_6_ it crashed (not just an error
message :-)). Should I then "downgrade" to 5_2_2?
Which Perl version would you recommend?
> Or, write the foreach loop the old-fashioned way with lots of
> punctuation to get in the way of reading and understanding it:
>
> foreach ( find_htm($dir) ) {
> print "$_\n";
> }
>
I tried that too and this time nothing happened, except for a warning:
Name "File::Basename::VERSION" used only once: possible typo at
C:\Perl\lib/File/Basename.pm line 121.
But indeed there's no point in testing that grandpa-perl. I'll upgrade
and then see what happens.
> >When I get back to my office (10 days or so),
>
> You seem to be overly patient :-)
>
> You won't have 15 free minutes to spend in the next week and a half?
No, I won't be anywhere near my office until the week of December 3.
BTW, are you by any chance going to XML-World?
> Please clearly state what version of Perl you are using.
>
> I want to skip your posts if it is not 5.005_03 or better.
>
On my laptop and my olde PC at home, I'm using 5.003_07. I'll certainly
upgrade asap...certainly before I bother the group again.
Roger and out (I'll be incomunicado foe all of next week)
Rafal
--
...Stand beside her and guide her
through the night with the light from above.
=================
Rafal S. Konopka
<rafalk@home.com>
=================
------------------------------
Date: 6 Apr 2001 21:33:47 GMT (Last modified)
From: Perl-Users-Request@ruby.oce.orst.edu (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)
Subject: Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01)
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End of Perl-Users Digest V10 Issue 2195
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