[22469] in Perl-Users-Digest

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

Perl-Users Digest, Issue: 4690 Volume: 10

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Mon Mar 10 14:12:20 2003

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 11:10:10 -0800 (PST)
From: Perl-Users Digest <Perl-Users-Request@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU>
To: Perl-Users@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)

Perl-Users Digest           Mon, 10 Mar 2003     Volume: 10 Number: 4690

Today's topics:
        Statistics for comp.lang.perl.misc <gbacon@cs.uah.edu>
        Trying to Learn Chomp <jc_va@hotmail.com>
    Re: Trying to Learn Chomp <mpapec@yahoo.com>
    Re: Trying to Learn Chomp <wksmith@optonline.net>
    Re: Trying to Learn Chomp <jc_va@hotmail.com>
    Re: Trying to Learn Chomp <jc_va@hotmail.com>
    Re: uninitialized value <tkb3@att.net>
        Word Boundaries <jc_va@hotmail.com>
    Re: Word Boundaries <neil.shadrach@corryn.com>
    Re: Word Boundaries <dont@want.spam>
    Re: Word Boundaries (Sam Holden)
    Re: XS code to call DLL <h.m.brand@hccnet.nl>
        Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01) (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 11:25:04 -0000
From: Greg Bacon <gbacon@cs.uah.edu>
Subject: Statistics for comp.lang.perl.misc
Message-Id: <v6otgg1vn71r05@corp.supernews.com>

Following is a summary of articles spanning a 7 day period,
beginning at 03 Mar 2003 11:27:52 GMT and ending at
10 Mar 2003 10:53:15 GMT.

Notes
=====

    - A line in the body of a post is considered to be original if it
      does *not* match the regular expression /^\s{0,3}(?:>|:|\S+>|\+\+)/.
    - All text after the last cut line (/^-- $/) in the body is
      considered to be the author's signature.
    - The scanner prefers the Reply-To: header over the From: header
      in determining the "real" email address and name.
    - Original Content Rating (OCR) is the ratio of the original content
      volume to the total body volume.
    - Find the News-Scan distribution on the CPAN!
      <URL:http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-module/News/>
    - Please send all comments to Greg Bacon <gbacon@cs.uah.edu>.
    - Copyright (c) 2003 Greg Bacon.
      Verbatim copying and redistribution is permitted without royalty;
      alteration is not permitted.  Redistribution and/or use for any
      commercial purpose is prohibited.

Excluded Posters
================

perlfaq-suggestions\@(?:.*\.)?perl\.com
faq\@(?:.*\.)?denver\.pm\.org
comdog\@panix\.com

Totals
======

Posters:  233
Articles: 799 (335 with cutlined signatures)
Threads:  164
Volume generated: 1535.9 kb
    - headers:    694.6 kb (13,199 lines)
    - bodies:     797.6 kb (25,834 lines)
    - original:   503.0 kb (17,596 lines)
    - signatures: 43.0 kb (1,334 lines)

Original Content Rating: 0.631

Averages
========

Posts per poster: 3.4
    median: 2 posts
    mode:   1 post - 114 posters
    s:      5.5 posts
Posts per thread: 4.9
    median: 4.0 posts
    mode:   1 post - 32 threads
    s:      5.5 posts
Message size: 1968.4 bytes
    - header:     890.1 bytes (16.5 lines)
    - body:       1022.1 bytes (32.3 lines)
    - original:   644.6 bytes (22.0 lines)
    - signature:  55.1 bytes (1.7 lines)

Top 10 Posters by Number of Posts
=================================

         (kb)   (kb)  (kb)  (kb)
Posts  Volume (  hdr/ body/ orig)  Address
-----  --------------------------  -------

   41    75.3 ( 37.6/ 36.2/ 24.8)  "Tore Aursand" <tore@aursand.no>
   40    98.5 ( 33.8/ 53.3/ 31.0)  Benjamin Goldberg <goldbb2@earthlink.net>
   31    61.6 ( 23.6/ 38.0/ 16.8)  Anno Siegel <anno4000@lublin.zrz.tu-berlin.de>
   28    88.2 ( 31.3/ 53.3/ 43.2)  tadmc@augustmail.com
   22    45.4 ( 20.1/ 20.9/ 19.8)  abigail@abigail.nl
   22    34.2 ( 19.8/ 14.4/  7.3)  "Jürgen Exner" <jurgenex@hotmail.com>
   19    34.3 ( 17.2/ 15.6/  7.4)  Gunnar Hjalmarsson <noreply@gunnar.cc>
   18    32.8 ( 18.2/ 14.6/  9.7)  "Peter Cooper" <newsfeed2@boog.co.uk>
   16    34.9 ( 13.9/ 19.9/ 11.7)  Brian McCauley <nobull@mail.com>
   14    30.0 ( 15.1/ 14.7/  9.7)  "Eric J. Roode" <REMOVEsdnCAPS@comcast.net>

These posters accounted for 31.4% of all articles.

Top 10 Posters by Volume
========================

  (kb)   (kb)  (kb)  (kb)
Volume (  hdr/ body/ orig)  Posts  Address
--------------------------  -----  -------

  98.5 ( 33.8/ 53.3/ 31.0)     40  Benjamin Goldberg <goldbb2@earthlink.net>
  88.2 ( 31.3/ 53.3/ 43.2)     28  tadmc@augustmail.com
  75.3 ( 37.6/ 36.2/ 24.8)     41  "Tore Aursand" <tore@aursand.no>
  61.6 ( 23.6/ 38.0/ 16.8)     31  Anno Siegel <anno4000@lublin.zrz.tu-berlin.de>
  45.4 ( 20.1/ 20.9/ 19.8)     22  abigail@abigail.nl
  34.9 ( 13.9/ 19.9/ 11.7)     16  Brian McCauley <nobull@mail.com>
  34.3 ( 17.2/ 15.6/  7.4)     19  Gunnar Hjalmarsson <noreply@gunnar.cc>
  34.2 ( 19.8/ 14.4/  7.3)     22  "Jürgen Exner" <jurgenex@hotmail.com>
  32.8 ( 18.2/ 14.6/  9.7)     18  "Peter Cooper" <newsfeed2@boog.co.uk>
  30.0 ( 15.1/ 14.7/  9.7)     14  "Eric J. Roode" <REMOVEsdnCAPS@comcast.net>

These posters accounted for 34.8% of the total volume.

Top 10 Posters by Volume of Original Content (min. five posts)
==============================================================

        (kb)
Posts   orig  Address
-----  -----  -------

   28   43.2  tadmc@augustmail.com
   40   31.0  Benjamin Goldberg <goldbb2@earthlink.net>
   41   24.8  "Tore Aursand" <tore@aursand.no>
   22   19.8  abigail@abigail.nl
   31   16.8  Anno Siegel <anno4000@lublin.zrz.tu-berlin.de>
   12   12.5  ctcgag@hotmail.com
   16   11.7  Brian McCauley <nobull@mail.com>
   11    9.8  "Alan J. Flavell" <flavell@mail.cern.ch>
   14    9.7  "Eric J. Roode" <REMOVEsdnCAPS@comcast.net>
   18    9.7  "Peter Cooper" <newsfeed2@boog.co.uk>

These posters accounted for 37.6% of the original volume.

Top 10 Posters by OCR (minimum of five posts)
==============================================

         (kb)    (kb)
OCR      orig /  body  Posts  Address
-----  --------------  -----  -------

0.946  ( 19.8 / 20.9)     22  abigail@abigail.nl
0.810  ( 43.2 / 53.3)     28  tadmc@augustmail.com
0.789  (  3.8 /  4.8)      5  Michele Dondi <bik.mido@tiscalinet.it>
0.775  (  6.4 /  8.3)      5  david <dwlepage@yahoo.com>
0.773  (  9.2 / 11.8)      8  Eric Osman <ericosman-nospam@rcn.com>
0.714  (  4.9 /  6.8)      5  "William Alexander Segraves" <wsegrave@mindspring.com>
0.700  (  9.8 / 14.0)     11  "Alan J. Flavell" <flavell@mail.cern.ch>
0.684  ( 24.8 / 36.2)     41  "Tore Aursand" <tore@aursand.no>
0.664  (  9.7 / 14.6)     18  "Peter Cooper" <newsfeed2@boog.co.uk>
0.659  (  2.1 /  3.2)      5  impervious@attbi.com

Bottom 10 Posters by OCR (minimum of five posts)
================================================

         (kb)    (kb)
OCR      orig /  body  Posts  Address
-----  --------------  -----  -------

0.478  (  1.6 /  3.3)      8  helgi@decode.is
0.475  (  2.7 /  5.8)      5  Jay Tilton <tiltonj@erols.com>
0.474  (  4.3 /  9.0)      9  "John W. Krahn" <krahnj@acm.org>
0.471  (  7.4 / 15.6)     19  Gunnar Hjalmarsson <noreply@gunnar.cc>
0.442  ( 16.8 / 38.0)     31  Anno Siegel <anno4000@lublin.zrz.tu-berlin.de>
0.430  (  5.6 / 13.0)      5  Joe Creaney <mail@annuna.com>
0.430  (  1.0 /  2.4)      5  Matija Papec <mpapec@yahoo.com>
0.423  (  1.6 /  3.7)      7  Alan Gutierrez <ajglist@izzy.net>
0.355  (  2.9 /  8.0)     11  "Janek Schleicher" <bigj@kamelfreund.de>
0.312  (  1.2 /  3.9)      6  Barry Kimelman <barryk2@SPAM-KILLER.mts.net>

37 posters (15%) had at least five posts.

Top 10 Threads by Number of Posts
=================================

Posts  Subject
-----  -------

   39  I  want to know the line n umber of the error !
   36  Lightweight CGI module?
   32  Greedy regexps
   15  CGI query string help
   14  NEWBIE: PerlNET
   13  SUBSTR or pattern matching?
   13  Regular Expressions
   13  Stolen!
   11  Perl Mysql uploading a image in a database.
   11  printing hash values

These threads accounted for 24.7% of all articles.

Top 10 Threads by Volume
========================

  (kb)   (kb)  (kb)  (kb)
Volume (  hdr/ body/ orig)  Posts  Subject
--------------------------  -----  -------

  83.3 ( 37.0/ 45.2/ 29.2)     39  I  want to know the line n umber of the error !
  72.6 ( 36.3/ 35.3/ 22.7)     36  Lightweight CGI module?
  58.7 ( 28.6/ 27.8/ 17.2)     32  Greedy regexps
  40.1 (  9.9/ 23.4/ 12.9)     11  Counting matches in a regular expression
  33.8 (  1.8/ 32.0/ 32.0)      2  Posting Guidelines for comp.lang.perl.misc ($Revision: 1.4 $)
  28.5 ( 13.5/ 15.1/  9.5)     15  CGI query string help
  28.3 ( 11.6/ 16.5/  6.4)      9  new Perl feature request: call into shared libs
  27.2 ( 13.7/ 12.6/  6.9)     13  Stolen!
  26.2 (  8.7/ 16.6/ 11.2)     10  Obfuscated Perl Challenge
  26.1 ( 12.1/ 13.5/  8.7)     13  Regular Expressions

These threads accounted for 27.7% of the total volume.

Top 10 Threads by OCR (minimum of five posts)
=============================================

         (kb)    (kb)
OCR      orig /  body  Posts  Subject
-----  --------------  -----  -------

0.904  ( 13.8/  15.3)      5  New module proposed: Class::Accessor::NoviceArray
0.817  (  2.6/   3.1)      6  ***Text files***
0.786  (  8.0/  10.2)      5  Redirect with links stored in external txt file
0.736  (  1.6/   2.2)      5  Early Perl source
0.736  (  1.8/   2.4)      5  simple while problem
0.712  (  9.4/  13.1)     11  Perl Mysql uploading a image in a database.
0.684  (  3.9/   5.6)      8  memory testing with Perl
0.673  ( 11.2/  16.6)     10  Obfuscated Perl Challenge
0.661  (  3.1/   4.7)      5  foreach in while-block cancels while
0.658  (  5.2/   7.9)      6  Non-fatal error, "script not found or unable to stat"

Bottom 10 Threads by OCR (minimum of five posts)
================================================

         (kb)    (kb)
OCR      orig /  body  Posts  Subject
-----  --------------  -----  -------

0.442  (  7.2 / 16.4)      8  Moving on a grd.
0.440  (  2.2 /  5.0)      6  Catching errors using DBI
0.424  (  1.7 /  4.0)      6  Problem with Term::ReadKey on RedHat
0.414  (  3.0 /  7.2)      6  a minor point about the distinction between arrays and lists.
0.409  (  1.8 /  4.4)      6  '@' symbol confusion
0.405  (  1.3 /  3.3)      5  Errors to browser??
0.404  (  1.4 /  3.4)      5  Shell commands
0.399  (  3.0 /  7.5)      9  Print lines of file until certain string found?
0.388  (  6.4 / 16.5)      9  new Perl feature request: call into shared libs
0.316  (  2.9 /  9.0)      6  DBD and DBI on Solaris 64 bit

66 threads (40%) had at least five posts.

Top 10 Targets for Crossposts
=============================

Articles  Newsgroup
--------  ---------

       6  comp.lang.asm.x86
       6  comp.lang.perl.modules
       5  comp.lang.perl
       4  alt.perl
       3  comp.lang.python
       2  comp.protocols.snmp
       2  comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix
       2  comp.databases.sybase
       2  sybase.public.connectivity.open_client
       1  comp.infosystems.www.authoring.cgi

Top 10 Crossposters
===================

Articles  Address
--------  -------

       4  Joachim Ring <jring@web.de>
       3  "Josh McAdams" <jmcada@hotmail.com>
       3  Guenter <no.spam@gknw.de>
       3  Joe Smith <inwap@inwap.com>
       3  Malte Ubl <ubl@schaffhausen.de>
       2  Bryan Castillo <rook_5150@yahoo.com>
       2  Ronald Schmidt <RonaldWS@software-path.com>
       2  <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> (Jari Aalto+mail.perl)
       1  "Jürgen Exner" <jurgenex@hotmail.com>
       1  Marshall Dudley <mdudley@execonn.com>


------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 15:28:30 GMT
From: "Buck Turgidson" <jc_va@hotmail.com>
Subject: Trying to Learn Chomp
Message-Id: <12a3e175ae77a0e2ccfd163cd7836659@news.teranews.com>

I am learning Perl (slowly).  I have some confusion about the chomp
function.  According to "Learning Perl", it only operates on the newline.

Below, when commented out, it prints the before and after of each line after
the substitution.  When I uncomment it, it only prints the last line.

Any idea where I am confused?  I basically want this:

abc xyz
xyz xyz
123 123




D:\temp>cat xx.txt
abc
xyz
123

D:\temp>cat h:\dev\perl\kitty.pl
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
@ARGV = ("d:\\temp\\xx.txt");
while (<>) {
    #chomp();
    print ;
    s/abc/xyz/;
    print ;
}

D:\temp>d:\cygwin\bin\perl.exe -w H:\dev\perl\kitty.pl
abc
xyz
xyz
xyz
123
123

D:\temp>d:\cygwin\bin\perl.exe -w H:\dev\perl\kitty.pl
123





------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 16:40:19 +0100
From: Matija Papec <mpapec@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Trying to Learn Chomp
Message-Id: <u7cp6v0jc0ulqj27d06i416sl3bct1mb3d@4ax.com>

X-Ftn-To: Buck Turgidson 

"Buck Turgidson" <jc_va@hotmail.com> wrote:
>I am learning Perl (slowly).  I have some confusion about the chomp
>function.  According to "Learning Perl", it only operates on the newline.
>
>Below, when commented out, it prints the before and after of each line after
>the substitution.  When I uncomment it, it only prints the last line.

at the end of the script put:
print "\n";

I had the same problem under win32 and perl; for some reason perl doesn't
write last line to STDOUT.



-- 
Matija


------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 16:40:19 GMT
From: "Bill Smith" <wksmith@optonline.net>
Subject: Re: Trying to Learn Chomp
Message-Id: <Td3ba.90995$gf7.20462035@news4.srv.hcvlny.cv.net>


"Matija Papec" <mpapec@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:u7cp6v0jc0ulqj27d06i416sl3bct1mb3d@4ax.com...
> X-Ftn-To: Buck Turgidson
>
--snip--
> I had the same problem under win32 and perl; for some reason perl
doesn't
> write last line to STDOUT.
--snip--

Strange, I was not able to duplicate the problem.  The script works as
expected with or without the chomp() using ActiveState perl 5.6.1 under
Windows ME.

The OP's use of 'cat' suggests that he is using some version of Unix,
not win32.

Bill




------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 16:49:25 GMT
From: "Buck Turgidson" <jc_va@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: Trying to Learn Chomp
Message-Id: <56d497ac6e76b20585a74ca87e336284@news.teranews.com>

> Strange, I was not able to duplicate the problem.  The script works as
> expected with or without the chomp() using ActiveState perl 5.6.1 under
> Windows ME.
>
> The OP's use of 'cat' suggests that he is using some version of Unix,
> not win32.
>
> Bill
>

It is Win32, but I have cygwin installed.  I didn't realize I was catting,
but I guess it works at the DOS prompt.




------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 16:56:48 GMT
From: "Buck Turgidson" <jc_va@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: Trying to Learn Chomp
Message-Id: <4a1943871e7237d50d99cc7d3333e335@news.teranews.com>

> Strange, I was not able to duplicate the problem.  The script works as
> expected with or without the chomp() using ActiveState perl 5.6.1 under
> Windows ME.
>
> The OP's use of 'cat' suggests that he is using some version of Unix,
> not win32.
>
> Bill
>

I just tried it on our Unix system and it works up there.  Maybe I shouldn't
rely on this Cygwin version, and get Active Perl for Windows.  I might learn
something incorrectly.






------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 14:17:58 GMT
From: "Tony" <tkb3@att.net>
Subject: Re: uninitialized value
Message-Id: <p81ba.17760$1v.751553@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net>

Hi Tore,


Thanks for the tips!  I thought it had to be the form that was causing it,
as after 4 days of investigating my head was starting to hurt :)

I'll give this a try, I sure like perl, but starting out has been a
challenge for me!

I appreciate you taking the time to help me out!



On Sat, 08 Mar 2003 01:37:27 +0100, Tore Aursand wrote:

> On Fri, 07 Mar 2003 19:54:41 +0000, Tony wrote:
>> "Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) or string..."
<snip>


------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 16:47:00 GMT
From: "Buck Turgidson" <jc_va@hotmail.com>
Subject: Word Boundaries
Message-Id: <af4cc581f0415837fb4d2103b2e7f01d@news.teranews.com>

I am confused as to wny $a and $c below seem inconsistent.  In other words,
both seem to be saying match on the word boundary, but in the case of $b it
seems to be doing the opposite.

I would have expected $a and $c to match, and not $b.  Can someone
straighten me out?



$a = "x + y";   # /\b\+\b/   does not match
$b = "x+y";     # /\b\+\b/   matches
$c = "a b c";   # /\bb\b/    matches





------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 16:56:30 +0000
From: Neil Shadrach <neil.shadrach@corryn.com>
Subject: Re: Word Boundaries
Message-Id: <3E6CC3BE.4080606@corryn.com>

Buck Turgidson wrote:
> I am confused as to wny $a and $c below seem inconsistent.  In other words,
> both seem to be saying match on the word boundary, but in the case of $b it
> seems to be doing the opposite.
> 
> I would have expected $a and $c to match, and not $b.  Can someone
> straighten me out?
> 
> 
> 
> $a = "x + y";   # /\b\+\b/   does not match
word boundaries at end of "x" and start of "y" - pattern doesn't allow for spaces so no match

> $b = "x+y";     # /\b\+\b/   matches
word boundaries at end of "x" and start of "y" - matches

> $c = "a b c";   # /\bb\b/    matches
word boundaries at start and end of "b" ( as well as x and y as above ) - matches




------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 17:15:59 +0000
From: Chris Lowth <dont@want.spam>
Subject: Re: Word Boundaries
Message-Id: <SM3ba.4349$EA6.949460@newsfep2-win.server.ntli.net>

Buck Turgidson wrote:

> I am confused as to wny $a and $c below seem inconsistent.  In other
> words, both seem to be saying match on the word boundary, but in the case
> of $b it seems to be doing the opposite.
> 
> I would have expected $a and $c to match, and not $b.  Can someone
> straighten me out?
> 
> 
> 
> $a = "x + y";   # /\b\+\b/   does not match
> $b = "x+y";     # /\b\+\b/   matches
> $c = "a b c";   # /\bb\b/    matches

Are you assuming that the patterns are tied to the start and end of the 
string? If you added "^" and "$" to the end of the pattern, the behaviour 
changes. Also note that "+" is not a word character.

\b\+\b does not match "x + y" but does match "x+y"
(you havent allowed for the spaces in the patten).

\bb\b matches the letter "b" and the word boundaries either side of it.

Chris
-- 
Real address: chris at lowth dot sea oh em.
For free GPL e-mail virus blockade ...
  http://protector.sourceforge.net


------------------------------

Date: 10 Mar 2003 17:30:22 GMT
From: sholden@flexal.cs.usyd.edu.au (Sam Holden)
Subject: Re: Word Boundaries
Message-Id: <slrnb6pite.svu.sholden@flexal.cs.usyd.edu.au>

On Mon, 10 Mar 2003 16:47:00 GMT, Buck Turgidson <jc_va@hotmail.com> wrote:
> I am confused as to wny $a and $c below seem inconsistent.  In other words,
> both seem to be saying match on the word boundary, but in the case of $b it
> seems to be doing the opposite.
> 
> I would have expected $a and $c to match, and not $b.  Can someone
> straighten me out?
> 
> 
> 
> $a = "x + y";   # /\b\+\b/   does not match

' ' is in \W and '+' is in \W. Hence there is not a word boundary between
the ' ' and the '+'.

> $b = "x+y";     # /\b\+\b/   matches

'x' and 'y' are in \w. '+' is in \W. Hence there is a word boundary on both
sides of the space.

> $c = "a b c";   # /\bb\b/    matches

' ' is in \W. 'b' is in \w. Hence there is a word boundary on both
sides of the 'b'.

-- 
Sam Holden



------------------------------

Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 14:50:07 +0100
From: "H. Merijn Brand" <h.m.brand@hccnet.nl>
To: comp.lang.perl.misc
Subject: Re: XS code to call DLL
Message-Id: <Xns933A96E9A6AECMerijn@192.0.1.90>

"Brian Helterline" <brian_helterline@hp.com> wrote in news:b431s8$3tr$1
@hpcvsgen.cv.hp.com:

> Hello,
> 
> This is my first attempt to try and access a DLL (Windows) from perl.
> I have the C header file for the function definitions but don't know
> if/how to link them with perl.  I looked into the XS module, but it
> quickly confused me.  Any general guidence would be greatly appreciated
> such as:
> I'm assuming I need to make a module to access the .DLL
> Do I need to write 'C' code to glue this together?
> Can I do the module all in perl?
> 
> Thanks for any pointers/help

+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Win32::API 0.40                                                    |
|   posted by pudge on Sunday March 09, @13:44 (modules)             |
|   http://use.perl.org/article.pl?sid=03/03/08/2345221              |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+

dada (mailto:dada@perl.it) writes "I've just released version 0.40 of
Win32::API, the popular tool to import functions from Win32 DLLs. in a
blurb, here's what this version can do: automatically define a Perl
sub with the name of the imported API (eg. no more $function->Call(...) 
ugliness), support function prototypes (credits to Dave Roth for this), 
support C structures 'natively', support callbacks (very experimental). 
Enjoy!"

Discuss this story at:
    http://use.perl.org/comments.pl?sid=03/03/08/2345221


-- 
H.Merijn Brand    Amsterdam Perl Mongers (http://www.amsterdam.pm.org/)
using perl-5.6.1, 5.8.0 & 633 on HP-UX 10.20 & 11.00, AIX 4.2, AIX 4.3,
     WinNT 4, Win2K pro & WinCE 2.11 often with Tk800.024 &/| DBD-Unify
ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/languages/perl/CPAN/authors/id/H/HM/HMBRAND/


------------------------------

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)
Message-Id: <null>


Administrivia:

The Perl-Users Digest is a retransmission of the USENET newsgroup
comp.lang.perl.misc.  For subscription or unsubscription requests, send
the single line:

	subscribe perl-users
or:
	unsubscribe perl-users

to almanac@ruby.oce.orst.edu.  

To submit articles to comp.lang.perl.announce, send your article to
clpa@perl.com.

To request back copies (available for a week or so), send your request
to almanac@ruby.oce.orst.edu with the command "send perl-users x.y",
where x is the volume number and y is the issue number.

For other requests pertaining to the digest, send mail to
perl-users-request@ruby.oce.orst.edu. Do not waste your time or mine
sending perl questions to the -request address, I don't have time to
answer them even if I did know the answer.


------------------------------
End of Perl-Users Digest V10 Issue 4690
***************************************


home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post