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Perl-Users Digest, Issue: 9859 Volume: 10

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Tue Oct 17 14:10:21 2006

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 11:10:09 -0700 (PDT)
From: Perl-Users Digest <Perl-Users-Request@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU>
To: Perl-Users@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)

Perl-Users Digest           Tue, 17 Oct 2006     Volume: 10 Number: 9859

Today's topics:
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <sherm@Sherm-Pendleys-Computer.local>
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <john@castleamber.com>
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <john@castleamber.com>
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <mark.clementsREMOVETHIS@wanadoo.fr>
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <tzz@lifelogs.com>
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <DJStunks@gmail.com>
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <DJStunks@gmail.com>
    Re: Need a Perl Scripting <darkon.tdo@gmail.com>
    Re: remote commands on unix from win :( <tzz@lifelogs.com>
    Re: Standard output problem <jl_post@hotmail.com>
        strange behavior of -s $filename <mark.leeds@morganstanley.com>
    Re: strange behavior of -s $filename <mritty@gmail.com>
    Re: strange behavior of -s $filename <jl_post@hotmail.com>
    Re: strange behavior of -s $filename (reading news)
    Re: strange behavior of -s $filename <mark.leeds@morganstanley.com>
    Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm <jgibson@mail.arc.nasa.gov>
    Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm <tzz@lifelogs.com>
    Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm <DJStunks@gmail.com>
    Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm <christoph.lamprecht.no.spam@web.de>
    Re: Using Schedule::Cron <jgibson@mail.arc.nasa.gov>
        Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01) (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)

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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 09:16:58 -0400
From: Sherm Pendley <sherm@Sherm-Pendleys-Computer.local>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <m27iyzrsj9.fsf@Sherm-Pendleys-Computer.local>

senatorcool2002@gmail.com writes:

> I need a Perl Scripting just which check for any URL's and give me a
> positive or negative response if the URL is available or not
> repectively.
> I found many codes but they are all simply modules to be polished to
> work out completely.
> Any of u please send me a full script with posible examples,such that i
> have nothing edit apart from ur own texts.

Happy to - contact me privately at the address below, and we'll talk about
how to arrange payment.

sherm--

-- 
Web Hosting by West Virginians, for West Virginians: http://wv-www.net
Cocoa programming in Perl: http://camelbones.sourceforge.net


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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 16:03:16 GMT
From: John Bokma <john@castleamber.com>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <Xns985F707289390castleamber@130.133.1.4>

senatorcool2002@gmail.com wrote:

> HI,.
> I need a Perl Scripting just which check for any URL's and give me a
> positive or negative response if the URL is available or not
> repectively.
> I found many codes but they are all simply modules to be polished to
> work out completely.
> Any of u please send me a full script with posible examples,such that i
> have nothing edit apart from ur own texts.

I need a complete house. If I send u the plans and u build it, then I give 
u a complete working program that solves ur problem.

-- 
John                Experienced Perl programmer: http://castleamber.com/

          Perl help, tutorials, and examples: http://johnbokma.com/perl/


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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 16:04:08 GMT
From: John Bokma <john@castleamber.com>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <Xns985F70982722Ecastleamber@130.133.1.4>

senatorcool2002@gmail.com wrote:

> Hi Paul,
> 
> First of all i would like to thank u for the reply.
> I have been trying for the code for the past two days,but the deadline
> for my project is already gone,atleast not later than 2 days i have to
> submit it.

Maybe you shouldn't try to sell yourself on e-lance for 1 USD/hr?

-- 
John                Experienced Perl programmer: http://castleamber.com/

          Perl help, tutorials, and examples: http://johnbokma.com/perl/


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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 18:29:59 +0200
From: Mark Clements <mark.clementsREMOVETHIS@wanadoo.fr>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <45350504$0$27392$ba4acef3@news.orange.fr>

senatorcool2002@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi Paul,
> 
> First of all i would like to thank u for the reply.
> I have been trying for the code for the past two days,but the deadline
> for my project is already gone,atleast not later than 2 days i have to
> submit it.
> Thats y i m in need of the script,i m also new to perl environment.
> They gave me basic training in Perl and put me into a project.
> This is my situtaion,hope u can understand mine.

Check out Net::DNS. You can find it at search.cpan.org . If you can't 
work out something using this module from its documentation, then your 
"basic training" was far too basic and you should report this to your 
employer.

Mark


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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 17:42:28 +0100
From: Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <g69ac3urj0r.fsf@lifelogs.com>

On 17 Oct 2006, senatorcool2002@gmail.com wrote:

> I need a Perl Scripting just which check for any URL's and give me a
> positive or negative response if the URL is available or not
> repectively.

Why do you need a Perl script?  If you don't know Perl, don't use it.

Use curl or wget.  They will handle 99% of single-URL transactions.

> Any of u please send me a full script with posible examples,such that i
> have nothing edit apart from ur own texts.

Don't be ridiculous.

Ted



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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 10:27:45 -0700
From: "DJ Stunks" <DJStunks@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <1161106065.557471.21940@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>

senatorcool2002@gmail.com wrote:
> HI,.
> I need a Perl Scripting just which check for any URL's and give me a
> positive or negative response if the URL is available or not
> repectively.
> I found many codes but they are all simply modules to be polished to
> work out completely.
> Any of u please send me a full script with posible examples,such that i
> have nothing edit apart from ur own texts.

look dude, this can be completed in one line.

it took me 136 keystrokes to complete your "project" assuming the URLs
are stored in a file called tmp.urls.

now get back to IM'ing those pages, Senator!

-jp



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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 10:46:21 -0700
From: "DJ Stunks" <DJStunks@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <1161107181.602982.226840@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com>

DJ Stunks wrote:
> senatorcool2002@gmail.com wrote:
> > HI,.
> > I need a Perl Scripting just which check for any URL's and give me a
> > positive or negative response if the URL is available or not
> > repectively.
> > I found many codes but they are all simply modules to be polished to
> > work out completely.
> > Any of u please send me a full script with posible examples,such that i
> > have nothing edit apart from ur own texts.
>
> look dude, this can be completed in one line.
>
> it took me 136 keystrokes to complete your "project" assuming the URLs
> are stored in a file called tmp.urls.

90 words per minute x 6 keystrokes per average word / 136 keystroke
'scripting' = 15 seconds

therefore, I think you should ask your boss, Bill Frist, for a 15
second extension. 

-jp



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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 18:02:52 -0000
From: "David K. Wall" <darkon.tdo@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Need a Perl Scripting
Message-Id: <Xns985F8EE745E7Edkwwashere@216.168.3.30>

Mark Clements <mark.clementsREMOVETHIS@wanadoo.fr> wrote:

> senatorcool2002@gmail.com wrote:
>> Hi Paul,
>> 
>> First of all i would like to thank u for the reply.
>> I have been trying for the code for the past two days,but the
>> deadline for my project is already gone,atleast not later than
>> 2 days i have to submit it.
>> Thats y i m in need of the script,i m also new to perl
>> environment. They gave me basic training in Perl and put me
>> into a project. This is my situtaion,hope u can understand
>> mine. 
> 
> Check out Net::DNS. You can find it at search.cpan.org . If you
> can't work out something using this module from its
> documentation, then your "basic training" was far too basic and
> you should report this to your employer.

Net::DNS?  Isn't that pretty far upstream?  For something quick and 
dirty I'd just use LWP::Simple.  Or do you have some other purpose 
for suggesting Net::DNS?



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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 17:55:58 +0100
From: Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>
Subject: Re: remote commands on unix from win :(
Message-Id: <g69y7req3tt.fsf@lifelogs.com>

On 17 Oct 2006, hpbenton@scripps.edu wrote:

> I need a suggestion for a good way to ask a unix server to run a
> program for me, however I have to do this from a windows machine over
> the network. I was planning on useing Net::SSH::Perl till I found out
> that activestate :( doesn't suppost the library. 

Use the Putty suite (SSH client) from the command line with Pageant
(SSH agent).

Perl can automate this, but you don't need Perl to do it.  That's
actually a good thing--you can test manually before you script the
process.

Ted


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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 09:26:57 -0700
From: "jl_post@hotmail.com" <jl_post@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: Standard output problem
Message-Id: <1161102417.846013.70680@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>

wesphillips@gmail.com wrote:

> I have a perl script, it is very basic:
>
> #!/usr/bin/perl -w
> #test.pl
> print "test\n";
>
> If I run this script like this:
> perl ./test.pl
>
> I get the expected output, but if I run it like this:
>
> ./test.pl
>
> I don't get anything at all.
>
> Any ideas?

   Well, the first thing I would think of is that maybe DOS line
endings are interfering with your script (as Michele Dondi suggested),
but then the '-w' switch would be interpreted as '-w^M', which should
still run the perl interpreter.

   On Unix-like platforms I have encountered the CTRL-M problem before,
and I've also encountered one just like yours (that didn't appear to
have the DOS line-ending problem).  It's only happened to me once, and
I/we fixed it by opening the script in a text editor, deleting the
first line (the "shebang" line), and then re-typing it exactly the same
way.  After we saved the file, the script worked without any problems!

   So, what was causing our script not to run in the first place?  I
really have no idea.  Maybe a special blank character was encoded
somewhere in the shebang line (for instance, between "/usr/bin/perl"
and "-w"), but I can't say for sure, as we didn't keep a copy of the
original script around to examine.

   So try manually re-typing the shebang line and see if that works.
If not, try creating a short "Hello, World!" Perl script (with an
identical shebang line) and see if that works.  If it does,
copy-and-paste your first script into the "Hello, World!" script and
see if that runs.  If that runs, then delete the line that prints
"Hello, World!" and then you'll (hopefully) have the script you wanted
in the first place.

   I hope this helps.

   -- Jean-Luc



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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 07:28:10 -0700
From: "markpark" <mark.leeds@morganstanley.com>
Subject: strange behavior of -s $filename
Message-Id: <1161095290.093171.149850@i3g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>

all i want to do is match files in a directory ( @filelist came from
readdir ) that have a pattern and are not empty and i am using the
code below to do it.

it should work but when i run it gves me

"Use of uninitialized value in integer gt (>) at
/u/etlfs/dev/users/leedsmar/res/currency_analyzing/src/ca.pl"

i've checked the value of $item at each step in the loop and ithe first
two are . and ..
but then after that, it is the names of files but without the quotes.
i'll
try to find out how to quote something and see if that fixes things but
i doubt it.

the items in @filelist are coming from a readdir. man, this is really
weird to me.
if i keep the # line and take out the other one, it works but then i
don't have the
empty file checking and there can be empty files. thanks.

 foreach my $item (@filelist) {
      foreach my $pat (@datelist2array) {
	print "item = $item \n";
        if  (( $item =~ /$pat/ ) && ( -s $item > 0 )) {
#         if  ( $item =~ /$pat/ ) {
          print $out_file2 "$item \n";
	  last;
        }
      }
    }



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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 07:29:53 -0700
From: "Paul Lalli" <mritty@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: strange behavior of -s $filename
Message-Id: <1161095393.782431.69360@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>


markpark wrote:
> all i want to do is match files in a directory ( @filelist came from
> readdir ) that have a pattern and are not empty and i am using the
> code below to do it.
>
> it should work but when i run it gves me
>
> "Use of uninitialized value in integer gt (>) at
> /u/etlfs/dev/users/leedsmar/res/currency_analyzing/src/ca.pl"
>
> i've checked the value of $item at each step in the loop and ithe first
> two are . and ..
> but then after that, it is the names of files but without the quotes.
> i'll
> try to find out how to quote something and see if that fixes things but
> i doubt it.
>
> the items in @filelist are coming from a readdir. man, this is really
> weird to me.

It would be less weird if you read the documentation for the function
you're using.  Please do so now.  `perldoc -f readdir`


Paul Lalli



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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 08:32:41 -0700
From: "jl_post@hotmail.com" <jl_post@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: strange behavior of -s $filename
Message-Id: <1161099161.507941.112180@f16g2000cwb.googlegroups.com>

markpark wrote:
> all i want to do is match files in a directory ( @filelist came from
> readdir ) that have a pattern and are not empty and i am using the
> code below to do it.
>
> it should work but when i run it gves me
>
> "Use of uninitialized value in integer gt (>) at
> /u/etlfs/dev/users/leedsmar/res/currency_analyzing/src/ca.pl"

   First of all, let me commend you for your use of "use warnings;".
Many, many people don't write Perl code with warnings turned on and, as
a result, their script silently runs through errors that Perl can
easily catch and report (yet are not so easy for humans to find).

   (In other words, turning on warnings WILL NOT change the behavior of
your Perl script, so there's no real reason not to use them.  Not using
them makes it APPEAR that your scripts have less errors, but in reality
they're just hiding them, making operational scripts (that don't "use
warnings;") much more likely to contain errors.)

> the items in @filelist are coming from a readdir. man, this is really
> weird to me.

>  foreach my $item (@filelist) {
>       foreach my $pat (@datelist2array) {
> 	print "item = $item \n";
>         if  (( $item =~ /$pat/ ) && ( -s $item > 0 )) {
> #         if  ( $item =~ /$pat/ ) {
>           print $out_file2 "$item \n";
> 	  last;
>         }
>       }
>     }

   Your error seems to be a common one, so I must echo what Paul Lalli
said and tell you to read:

      perldoc -f readdir

specifically the part where it says:

      If you're planning to filetest the return values out of a
      "readdir", you'd better prepend the directory in question.
      Otherwise, because we didn't "chdir" there, it would have
      been testing the wrong file.

   For the record, I tend to make your same error several times a year,
so if I see that same warning when I use a filetest operator, I
(hopefully) immediately realize what I did wrong and correct it.  (And
I can't do that without "use warnings;"!)

   I hope this helps, Mark.

   -- Jean-Luc



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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 15:37:03 GMT
From: "Mumia W. (reading news)" <paduille.4060.mumia.w@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: strange behavior of -s $filename
Message-Id: <zM6Zg.12543$o71.10302@newsread3.news.pas.earthlink.net>

On 10/17/2006 09:28 AM, markpark wrote:
> all i want to do is match files in a directory ( @filelist came from
> readdir ) that have a pattern and are not empty and i am using the
> code below to do it.
> 
> it should work but when i run it gves me
> 
> "Use of uninitialized value in integer gt (>) at
> /u/etlfs/dev/users/leedsmar/res/currency_analyzing/src/ca.pl"
> [...]
> 
>  foreach my $item (@filelist) {
>       foreach my $pat (@datelist2array) {
> 	print "item = $item \n";
>         if  (( $item =~ /$pat/ ) && ( -s $item > 0 )) {
> #         if  ( $item =~ /$pat/ ) {
>           print $out_file2 "$item \n";
> 	  last;
>         }
>       }
>     }
> 

What happens when you prepend the directory name onto $item before doing 
-s ?

;-)

-- 
paduille.4060.mumia.w@earthlink.net


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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 09:16:44 -0700
From: "markpark" <mark.leeds@morganstanley.com>
Subject: Re: strange behavior of -s $filename
Message-Id: <1161101804.759026.169380@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>

thank you. everyone's suggestion worked.

man, this list ( and the doc ) is incredible but i have to learn how to
get around the doc better. for instance,
with this last problem, i probably spent 3 or 4 hours
looking fore the bug ( tried to put quotes on the variable and
many other thing ) wheras if i would have known to do perldoc -f
readdir,
i would have saved tons of time.   i found www.perldoc.perl.org which i
think will be
really useful. it's just that there are a HUGE amount of tools/tricks
in perl so, when you
are new, knowing how to find the thing you need can be the most
difficult problem.

like in this one, you would have to know that the "error" is coming
from readdir
in order to do a perldoc -f readdir.

i would be more apt to do a perldoc -s which is what someone suggested
to
get me started. i'll keep trying. thanks again.






Mumia W. (reading news) wrote:
> On 10/17/2006 09:28 AM, markpark wrote:
> > all i want to do is match files in a directory ( @filelist came from
> > readdir ) that have a pattern and are not empty and i am using the
> > code below to do it.
> >
> > it should work but when i run it gves me
> >
> > "Use of uninitialized value in integer gt (>) at
> > /u/etlfs/dev/users/leedsmar/res/currency_analyzing/src/ca.pl"
> > [...]
> >
> >  foreach my $item (@filelist) {
> >       foreach my $pat (@datelist2array) {
> > 	print "item = $item \n";
> >         if  (( $item =~ /$pat/ ) && ( -s $item > 0 )) {
> > #         if  ( $item =~ /$pat/ ) {
> >           print $out_file2 "$item \n";
> > 	  last;
> >         }
> >       }
> >     }
> >
>
> What happens when you prepend the directory name onto $item before doing
> -s ?
> 
> ;-)
> 
> -- 
> paduille.4060.mumia.w@earthlink.net



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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 10:00:08 -0700
From: Jim Gibson <jgibson@mail.arc.nasa.gov>
Subject: Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm
Message-Id: <171020061000084767%jgibson@mail.arc.nasa.gov>

In article <1161029539.727053.265770@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>, DJ
Stunks <DJStunks@gmail.com> wrote:

> Paul Lalli wrote:


> > If you're really paranoid about what loop a next/last applies to, label
> > your blocks explicitly:
> >
> > ITEM: foreach my $item(@filelist) {
> >    PAT:  foreach my $pat (@datelist2array) {
> >              if ($item =~ /$pat/) {
> >                 print $out_file2 "$item \n";
> >                 next ITEM;
> >                 #or, equivalently in this case
> >                 # last PAT;
> >              }
> >           }
> > }
> 
> it's not just for the paranoid, Paul.  it's a Best Practice.  :-D

Ah, but in programming, paranoia _is_ the "Best Practice".

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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 18:06:05 +0100
From: Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>
Subject: Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm
Message-Id: <g69r6x6q3cy.fsf@lifelogs.com>

On 16 Oct 2006, DJStunks@gmail.com wrote:


Paul Lalli wrote: 
>> If you're really paranoid about what loop a next/last applies to, label
>> your blocks explicitly:

> it's not just for the paranoid, Paul.  it's a Best Practice.  :-D

Of course it's a best practice.  Just because you're paranoid doesn't
mean they are not after you.

Ted


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

Date: 17 Oct 2006 10:39:15 -0700
From: "DJ Stunks" <DJStunks@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm
Message-Id: <1161106755.678050.67420@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>


Jim Gibson wrote:
> In article <1161029539.727053.265770@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>, DJ
> Stunks <DJStunks@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Paul Lalli wrote:
> > > If you're really paranoid about what loop a next/last applies to, label
> > > your blocks explicitly:
> > >
> > > ITEM: foreach my $item(@filelist) {
> > >    PAT:  foreach my $pat (@datelist2array) {
> > >              if ($item =~ /$pat/) {
> > >                 print $out_file2 "$item \n";
> > >                 next ITEM;
> > >                 #or, equivalently in this case
> > >                 # last PAT;
> > >              }
> > >           }
> > > }
> >
> > it's not just for the paranoid, Paul.  it's a Best Practice.  :-D
>
> Ah, but in programming, paranoia _is_ the "Best Practice".

haha great point :)

-jp



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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 19:42:31 +0200
From: Ch Lamprecht <christoph.lamprecht.no.spam@web.de>
Subject: Re: use of next versus last in a nested loop algorithm
Message-Id: <eh34m6$tji$1@online.de>

markpark wrote:
> obviously ( form the previous message ) my main problem ( besides a
> lack of knowledge of perl ) is what to type in
> after perldoc to get the relevant information that i need. 

Type perldoc perl for an overview

Christoph


-- 

perl -e "print scalar reverse q/ed.enilno@ergn.l.hc/"


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

Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 10:12:45 -0700
From: Jim Gibson <jgibson@mail.arc.nasa.gov>
Subject: Re: Using Schedule::Cron
Message-Id: <171020061012450164%jgibson@mail.arc.nasa.gov>

In article <1161061397.854666.10070@i42g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>,
<super.sumanth@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hello all,
> 
>   I am a new bie in perl. I trying to write a scheduler but later
> figured out that this can be done using
> Schedule::Cron module.
> 
> I have a query regarding this module,
> Does this module take only sub routines to execute and not files.
> My problem is i have a script that needs to at a particular interval,
> using Schedule::Cron is it possible to exeute the script directly
> instead of calling the sub routine.
> i.e  I have a script, checker.ovpl which needs to be called with
> Schedule::Cron.
> I have done the following,
> 
>  sub dispatcher {
>     print "ID:   ",shift,"\n";
>     print "Args: ","@_","\n";
>   }
> my $cron = new Schedule::Cron(\&dispatcher);
>  $cron->add_entry("* * * * *","/path/checker.ovpl");
> $cron->run();
> 
> Here checker.ovpl is not getting invoked, instead i see messages from
> dispatcher sub routine.
> 
> Please let me know if execution of another script from Schedule::Cron
> can be done or not.

Have you read the documentation for this module? (enter 'perldoc
Schedule::Cron' on a command line or point a web browser to
<http://search.cpan.org/~roland/Schedule-Cron-0.9/Cron.pm>).

According to the documentation, only subroutines may be executed.
Therefore, if you want to execute an external program, write a
subroutine that uses the system function, backticks or qx() operator,
or fork/exec calls to execute the program file.

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

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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#the single line:
#
#	subscribe perl-users
#or:
#	unsubscribe perl-users
#
#to almanac@ruby.oce.orst.edu.  

NOTE: due to the current flood of worm email banging on ruby, the smtp
server on ruby has been shut off until further notice. 

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 9859
***************************************


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