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Perl-Users Digest, Issue: 1687 Volume: 11

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Thu Jul 3 16:09:48 2008

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 13:09:10 -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           Thu, 3 Jul 2008     Volume: 11 Number: 1687

Today's topics:
        64 bit version of Win32::API pm ? <santhosh.kulandaiyan@gmail.com>
        comp.lang.perl.misc pollution <simon.chao@fmr.com>
    Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution <ben@morrow.me.uk>
    Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution <tzz@lifelogs.com>
    Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution <simon.chao@fmr.com>
    Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution <simon.chao@fmr.com>
    Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution <tzz@lifelogs.com>
        embeding perl in C++ <PengYu.UT@gmail.com>
    Re: embeding perl in C++ <wahab@chemie.uni-halle.de>
    Re: embeding perl in C++ <spamtrap@dot-app.org>
    Re: embeding perl in C++ <PengYu.UT@gmail.com>
    Re: FAQ 8.28 How can I call backticks without shell pro <szrRE@szromanMO.comVE>
    Re: FAQ 8.28 How can I call backticks without shell pro <uri@stemsystems.com>
    Re: FAQ 8.28 How can I call backticks without shell pro <brian.d.foy@gmail.com>
        new CPAN modules on Thu Jul  3 2008 (Randal Schwartz)
        Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01) (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)

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

Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 22:41:33 -0700 (PDT)
From: "santhosh.kulandaiyan" <santhosh.kulandaiyan@gmail.com>
Subject: 64 bit version of Win32::API pm ?
Message-Id: <27345cc2-9de5-48ba-88a5-b48922266608@q24g2000prf.googlegroups.com>

Hello,
  I would like to know your comments about this issue that i am
facing.
I have downloaded the 64 bit perl from active state and i am trying to
run my perl script on this 64 bit perl engine (in Windows x64).
The perl script refers to Win32::API module.

I tried to copy the 32 bit Win32::API.pm into the c:\Perl64\lib\Win32
folder.
But when i try to run the script (perl -c myscript.pl), it throws an
error saying : "Unable to load the perl module".

I would assume this is because the perl module was taken from a 32 bit
machine.

Is there any 64 bit version of Win32::API.pm available? Does it even
make sense to ask if Win32(!!).API would have a 64 bit version..

Appreciate your comments/suggestions..

Thanks
Santhosh


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

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT)
From: nolo contendere <simon.chao@fmr.com>
Subject: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution
Message-Id: <3f449df2-0b0e-43d6-9fe3-eda35fef6915@e39g2000hsf.googlegroups.com>

This isn't about Perl, but it is about this newsgroup. I'm becoming
irritated by the spam that I see (I use Google Groups) and was
wondering if someone could suggest a great free newsreader, as well as
where and how to acquire it.


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

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 18:59:53 +0100
From: Ben Morrow <ben@morrow.me.uk>
Subject: Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution
Message-Id: <plgvj5-2241.ln1@osiris.mauzo.dyndns.org>


Quoth nolo contendere <simon.chao@fmr.com>:
> This isn't about Perl, but it is about this newsgroup. I'm becoming
> irritated by the spam that I see (I use Google Groups) and was
> wondering if someone could suggest a great free newsreader, as well as
> where and how to acquire it.

rn, of course... :) [1]

Personally I use trn, and I got it from FreeBSD ports; since you appear
to be on Win32 that's probably not much use to you. As you're a Firefox
user you could try Thunderbird.

Ben

[1] In case anyone doesn't know: rn is a newsreader that Larry wrote
    before he wrote perl...

-- 
I touch the fire and it freezes me,                      [ben@morrow.me.uk]
I look into it and it's black.
Why can't I feel? My skin should crack and peel---
I want the fire back...                     BtVS, 'Once More With Feeling'


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

Date: Thu, 03 Jul 2008 13:22:31 -0500
From: Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>
Subject: Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution
Message-Id: <86zloyn7yw.fsf@lifelogs.com>

On Thu, 3 Jul 2008 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT) nolo contendere <simon.chao@fmr.com> wrote: 

nc> This isn't about Perl, but it is about this newsgroup. I'm becoming
nc> irritated by the spam that I see (I use Google Groups) and was
nc> wondering if someone could suggest a great free newsreader, as well as
nc> where and how to acquire it.

Emacs comes with Gnus, which is quite good if you can live with ELisp.
It will do mail, news, RSS, etc. in a single interface.  It will filter
spam in newsgroups if you need that.

Ted


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

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 11:44:38 -0700 (PDT)
From: nolo contendere <simon.chao@fmr.com>
Subject: Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution
Message-Id: <c2966f17-5182-48d8-86a8-648a95083cf6@26g2000hsk.googlegroups.com>

On Jul 3, 1:59=A0pm, Ben Morrow <b...@morrow.me.uk> wrote:
> Quoth nolo contendere <simon.c...@fmr.com>:
>
> > This isn't about Perl, but it is about this newsgroup. I'm becoming
> > irritated by the spam that I see (I use Google Groups) and was
> > wondering if someone could suggest a great free newsreader, as well as
> > where and how to acquire it.
>
> rn, of course... :) [1]
>
> Personally I use trn, and I got it from FreeBSD ports; since you appear
> to be on Win32 that's probably not much use to you. As you're a Firefox
> user you could try Thunderbird.
>

I always thought Thunderbird was just an email client. I think Google
Groups has tainted the way I think about newsgroups. I think of them
as collections of threaded forum posts. Thanks for your suggestions,
I'll check out Thunderbird.


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

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 11:45:45 -0700 (PDT)
From: nolo contendere <simon.chao@fmr.com>
Subject: Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution
Message-Id: <2007613e-6bc5-4f06-96c6-fbfdeaec5a02@79g2000hsk.googlegroups.com>

On Jul 3, 2:22=A0pm, Ted Zlatanov <t...@lifelogs.com> wrote:
> On Thu, 3 Jul 2008 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT) nolo contendere <simon.c...@fmr.c=
om> wrote:
>
> nc> This isn't about Perl, but it is about this newsgroup. I'm becoming
> nc> irritated by the spam that I see (I use Google Groups) and was
> nc> wondering if someone could suggest a great free newsreader, as well a=
s
> nc> where and how to acquire it.
>
> Emacs comes with Gnus, which is quite good if you can live with ELisp.
> It will do mail, news, RSS, etc. in a single interface. =A0It will filter
> spam in newsgroups if you need that.
>

Yeah, I'm looking for the ability to filter. You're talking about
emacs for the windows platform?


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

Date: Thu, 03 Jul 2008 15:00:30 -0500
From: Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>
Subject: Re: comp.lang.perl.misc pollution
Message-Id: <86zloykaap.fsf@lifelogs.com>

On Thu, 3 Jul 2008 11:45:45 -0700 (PDT) nolo contendere <simon.chao@fmr.com> wrote: 

nc> On Jul 3, 2:22 pm, Ted Zlatanov <t...@lifelogs.com> wrote:
>> On Thu, 3 Jul 2008 10:40:28 -0700 (PDT) nolo contendere <simon.c...@fmr.com> wrote:
>> 
nc> This isn't about Perl, but it is about this newsgroup. I'm becoming
nc> irritated by the spam that I see (I use Google Groups) and was
nc> wondering if someone could suggest a great free newsreader, as well as
nc> where and how to acquire it.
>> 
>> Emacs comes with Gnus, which is quite good if you can live with ELisp.
>> It will do mail, news, RSS, etc. in a single interface.  It will filter
>> spam in newsgroups if you need that.

nc> Yeah, I'm looking for the ability to filter. You're talking about
nc> emacs for the windows platform?

Both Emacs and Gnus run on Windows, yes, but I don't run there
personally.  You'll need a recent release of Emacs and Gnus.

Filtering spam on Windows may require some custom setup, but at least
spam-stat.el works on all platforms (it's not as good as CRM114 and
such, though).  For more info, see the Gnus manual or try the Gnus
mailing list <ding@gnus.org>.

Again, this requires you to be at least interested in ELisp, since even
basic customization of Gnus requires you to use it.  I'm not sure how
appropriate that requirement is for comp.lang.perl.misc ;)

Ted


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

Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 23:00:58 -0700 (PDT)
From: Peng Yu <PengYu.UT@gmail.com>
Subject: embeding perl in C++
Message-Id: <8b616b40-3937-4a04-b3ce-26bde508d5d2@z66g2000hsc.googlegroups.com>

Hi,

It seem libperl can be used to embed perl in C++. But that was
developed long ago and is for C. I'm wondering if there are any new
and better library to embed perl in C++.

Thanks,
Peng


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

Date: Thu, 03 Jul 2008 08:53:52 +0200
From: Mirco Wahab <wahab@chemie.uni-halle.de>
Subject: Re: embeding perl in C++
Message-Id: <g4ht21$1roo$1@nserver.hrz.tu-freiberg.de>

Peng Yu wrote:
> It seem libperl can be used to embed perl in C++. But that was
> developed long ago and is for C. I'm wondering if there are any new
> and better library to embed perl in C++.

On the one hand, embedding *modern* Perl (5.10) is straight-
forward and easy if you know the pitfalls. On some projects,
I link the perl core to C++-programs, this works fine in Visual
Studio 6 up to Visual Studio 9 without any problems so far (using
the Activeperl distribution, others might work too). Under Linux,
the path to success is even simpler, just use the appropriate
Perl-Modules which support the embedding process (ExtUtils::Embed,
http://search.cpan.org/~rgarcia/perl-5.10.0/lib/ExtUtils/Embed.pm).

On the other hand, after the advent of the boost libraries
(e.g. Boost::Regex), there is (for me at least) dwindling
need to use this approach at all.

What do you want to use it for?

Regards

Mirco


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

Date: Thu, 03 Jul 2008 11:18:38 -0400
From: Sherman Pendley <spamtrap@dot-app.org>
Subject: Re: embeding perl in C++
Message-Id: <m1iqvnq9m9.fsf@dot-app.org>

Peng Yu <PengYu.UT@gmail.com> writes:

> It seem libperl can be used to embed perl in C++. But that was
> developed long ago and is for C. I'm wondering if there are any new
> and better library to embed perl in C++.

Libperl isn't a separate library for embedding - it *is* Perl, and
/usr/bin/perl is simply an application that uses it. There's only one
libperl, and that's the one included with Perl.

sherm--

-- 
My blog: http://shermspace.blogspot.com
Cocoa programming in Perl: http://camelbones.sourceforge.net


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

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 10:38:26 -0700 (PDT)
From: Peng Yu <PengYu.UT@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: embeding perl in C++
Message-Id: <5ea948af-6037-46d0-8c17-cdb51aaba7c1@l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com>

On Jul 3, 1:53 am, Mirco Wahab <wa...@chemie.uni-halle.de> wrote:
> Peng Yu wrote:
> > It seem libperl can be used to embed perl in C++. But that was
> > developed long ago and is for C. I'm wondering if there are any new
> > and better library to embed perl in C++.
>
> On the one hand, embedding *modern* Perl (5.10) is straight-
> forward and easy if you know the pitfalls. On some projects,
> I link the perl core to C++-programs, this works fine in Visual
> Studio 6 up to Visual Studio 9 without any problems so far (using
> the Activeperl distribution, others might work too). Under Linux,
> the path to success is even simpler, just use the appropriate
> Perl-Modules which support the embedding process (ExtUtils::Embed,http://search.cpan.org/~rgarcia/perl-5.10.0/lib/ExtUtils/Embed.pm).
>
> On the other hand, after the advent of the boost libraries
> (e.g. Boost::Regex), there is (for me at least) dwindling
> need to use this approach at all.
>
> What do you want to use it for?

I want to use it for processing text files. I feel that for certain
applications in text processing, writing perl code is much faster than
writing the equivalent C++ code. For example, I have a text file, who
is sorted based on the second to last column (called column X for
short), but there is no blank lines. Let's call the lines of the same
column X as a group. I would like to append the first line of each
group to the end of it and then add a blank line after the appended
line.

This can be done in just a few line of perl code (as follows), but it
would need much longer C++ code. In terms of program productivity,
using perl shall be much better than using C++ in text processing
applications. Using Boost::Regex still requires writing more code.
Therefore, I'm looking for embedding perl in C++.

perlembed is for C. Is any other packages that for embedding perl in C+
+? Although C is a subset of C++, my impression is that a package
design for C++ would better than a package designed for C in C++. For
example, boost.python is developed even there is a package to embed C
in python.

#!/usr/bin/perl

while (<>)
{
  @data = split;
  if (!defined($last_column)) {
    $first_line = $_;
    $last_column = $data[$#data - 1];
  }
  if ($data[$#data - 1] != $last_column) {
    $last_column = $data[$#data - 1];
    print "$first_line\n";
    $first_line = $_;
  }
  print $_;
}
print "$first_line\n";




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

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 10:20:28 -0700
From: "szr" <szrRE@szromanMO.comVE>
Subject: Re: FAQ 8.28 How can I call backticks without shell processing?
Message-Id: <g4j1ou01uu7@news4.newsguy.com>

PerlFAQ Server wrote:
[...]
> 8.28: How can I call backticks without shell processing?
[...]
>            open( GREP, "-|", 'grep', @opts, $search_string,
>            @filenames ); chomp(@ok = <GREP>);
>            close GREP;

Just a little thing I noticed, regarding the use of @opts and @filenames 
arrays above; unless each element has a leading or trailing space, they 
will end up smushed together:

if, say, @opts contains ('-a', '-b', '--ccc'), when passed to that 
open() it will end up becoming -a-b--ccc which is probably not what most 
would want. Putting a join() around both @opts and @filenames would get 
what most would like (and possibly using a map { "'$_'" } @filename to 
quote the filenames in case they contain sapces.)

-- 
szr 




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

Date: Thu, 03 Jul 2008 17:26:00 GMT
From: Uri Guttman <uri@stemsystems.com>
Subject: Re: FAQ 8.28 How can I call backticks without shell processing?
Message-Id: <x7d4luj2vr.fsf@mail.sysarch.com>

>>>>> "s" == szr  <szrRE@szromanMO.comVE> writes:

  s> PerlFAQ Server wrote:
  s> [...]
  >> 8.28: How can I call backticks without shell processing?
  s> [...]
  >> open( GREP, "-|", 'grep', @opts, $search_string,
  >> @filenames ); chomp(@ok = <GREP>);
  >> close GREP;

  s> Just a little thing I noticed, regarding the use of @opts and @filenames 
  s> arrays above; unless each element has a leading or trailing space, they 
  s> will end up smushed together:

  s> if, say, @opts contains ('-a', '-b', '--ccc'), when passed to that 
  s> open() it will end up becoming -a-b--ccc which is probably not what most 
  s> would want. Putting a join() around both @opts and @filenames would get 
  s> what most would like (and possibly using a map { "'$_'" } @filename to 
  s> quote the filenames in case they contain sapces.)

where did you get that idea? this invokes exec with a list (see perldoc
-f exec. and for proof:

perl -e '@e = qw( a b c ); open( $e, "-|", 'echo', @e ); print <$e>'
a b c

echo printed its args with spaces as expected so it got 3 separate args
and not 'abc' as you claim it would.

uri

-- 
Uri Guttman  ------  uri@stemsystems.com  --------  http://www.sysarch.com --
-----  Perl Code Review , Architecture, Development, Training, Support ------
--------- Free Perl Training --- http://perlhunter.com/college.html ---------
---------  Gourmet Hot Cocoa Mix  ----  http://bestfriendscocoa.com ---------


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

Date: Thu, 03 Jul 2008 14:54:08 -0400
From: brian d  foy <brian.d.foy@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: FAQ 8.28 How can I call backticks without shell processing?
Message-Id: <030720081454085344%brian.d.foy@gmail.com>

In article <g4j1ou01uu7@news4.newsguy.com>, szr <szrRE@szromanMO.comVE>
wrote:

> PerlFAQ Server wrote:
> [...]
> > 8.28: How can I call backticks without shell processing?
> [...]
> >            open( GREP, "-|", 'grep', @opts, $search_string,
> >            @filenames ); chomp(@ok = <GREP>);
> >            close GREP;
> 
> Just a little thing I noticed, regarding the use of @opts and @filenames 
> arrays above; unless each element has a leading or trailing space, they 
> will end up smushed together:

Try it and see what happens :)


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

Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2008 04:42:19 GMT
From: merlyn@stonehenge.com (Randal Schwartz)
Subject: new CPAN modules on Thu Jul  3 2008
Message-Id: <K3EyEJ.J8q@zorch.sf-bay.org>

The following modules have recently been added to or updated in the
Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN).  You can install them using the
instructions in the 'perlmodinstall' page included with your Perl
distribution.

AnyEvent-4.160
http://search.cpan.org/~mlehmann/AnyEvent-4.160/
provide framework for multiple event loops 
----
AnyEvent-HTTP-1.03
http://search.cpan.org/~mlehmann/AnyEvent-HTTP-1.03/
simple but non-blocking HTTP/HTTPS client 
----
Apache2-Controller-0.0002
http://search.cpan.org/~markle/Apache2-Controller-0.0002/
framework for Apache2 handler apps 
----
App-MadEye-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~tokuhirom/App-MadEye-0.05/
enterprise-class monitoring solutions 
----
Array-Each-Override-0.04
http://search.cpan.org/~arc/Array-Each-Override-0.04/
each for iterating over an array's keys and values 
----
CPAN2RT-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~ruz/CPAN2RT-0.03/
CPAN to RT converter for rt.cpan.org service 
----
Catalyst-Action-REST-0.62
http://search.cpan.org/~jshirley/Catalyst-Action-REST-0.62/
Automated REST Method Dispatching 
----
Data-Object-AutoWrap-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~andya/Data-Object-AutoWrap-0.01/
Autogenerate accessors for R/O object data 
----
Devel-Sub-Which-0.04
http://search.cpan.org/~nuffin/Devel-Sub-Which-0.04/
Name information about sub calls ? la "can" in UNIVERSAL and <which(1)>. 
----
Every-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~teodor/Every-0.01/
return true every N cycles or S seconds 
----
Fey-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~drolsky/Fey-0.08/
Better SQL Generation Through Perl 
----
Gtk2-Ex-Clock-5
http://search.cpan.org/~kryde/Gtk2-Ex-Clock-5/
simple digital clock widget 
----
HTML-RewriteAttributes-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~sartak/HTML-RewriteAttributes-0.03/
concise attribute rewriting 
----
HTML-TurboForm-0.18
http://search.cpan.org/~camelcase/HTML-TurboForm-0.18/
----
Lingua-PT-PLN-0.16
http://search.cpan.org/~jjoao/Lingua-PT-PLN-0.16/
Perl extension for NLP of the Portuguese Language 
----
Linux-LVM-0.14
http://search.cpan.org/~ckerner/Linux-LVM-0.14/
Perl extension for accessing Logical Volume Manager(LVM) data structures on Linux. 
----
Log-Fine-0.15
http://search.cpan.org/~cfuhrman/Log-Fine-0.15/
Yet another logging framework 
----
MIDI-Tweaks-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~jv/MIDI-Tweaks-0.03/
Enhancements to MIDI.pm. 
----
Math-Goedel-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~turugina/Math-Goedel-0.01/
Goedel number calculator 
----
Net-BitTorrent-0.025
http://search.cpan.org/~sanko/Net-BitTorrent-0.025/
BitTorrent peer-to-peer protocol class 
----
Net-Domain-ExpireDate-0.91
http://search.cpan.org/~despair/Net-Domain-ExpireDate-0.91/
obtain expiration date of domain names 
----
Nmap-Parser-1.14
http://search.cpan.org/~apersaud/Nmap-Parser-1.14/
parse nmap scan data with perl 
----
Number-Format-1.60
http://search.cpan.org/~wrw/Number-Format-1.60/
Perl extension for formatting numbers 
----
POE-Component-RSSAggregator-1.11
http://search.cpan.org/~jbisbee/POE-Component-RSSAggregator-1.11/
Watch Muliple RSS Feeds for New Headlines 
----
POE-Filter-SAXBuilder-0.04_01
http://search.cpan.org/~martijn/POE-Filter-SAXBuilder-0.04_01/
A POE Filter for parsing XML with XML::LibXML 
----
POE-XS-Loop-Poll-0.002
http://search.cpan.org/~tonyc/POE-XS-Loop-Poll-0.002/
an XS implementation of POE::Loop, using poll(2). 
----
POE-XS-Loop-Poll-0.003
http://search.cpan.org/~tonyc/POE-XS-Loop-Poll-0.003/
an XS implementation of POE::Loop, using poll(2). 
----
Parse-CPAN-MirroredBy-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~adamk/Parse-CPAN-MirroredBy-0.01/
Parse MIRRORED.BY 
----
Perl-SAX-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~adamk/Perl-SAX-0.08/
Generate SAX events for perl source code (incomplete) 
----
Pod-2-DocBook-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~jkutej/Pod-2-DocBook-0.01/
Convert Pod data to DocBook SGML 
----
Portable-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~adamk/Portable-0.08/
Perl on a Stick (EXPERIMENTAL) 
----
Portable-0.09
http://search.cpan.org/~adamk/Portable-0.09/
Perl on a Stick (EXPERIMENTAL) 
----
Portable-0.10
http://search.cpan.org/~adamk/Portable-0.10/
Perl on a Stick (EXPERIMENTAL) 
----
Queue-Q4M-0.00005
http://search.cpan.org/~dmaki/Queue-Q4M-0.00005/
Simple Interface To q4m 
----
Ruby-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~gfuji/Ruby-0.05/
Perl interface to Ruby interpreter 
----
Sjis-0.19
http://search.cpan.org/~ina/Sjis-0.19/
Source code filter for ShiftJIS script 
----
Template-Plugin-Duration-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~hedwig/Template-Plugin-Duration-0.01/
----
WWW-Discogs-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~leedo/WWW-Discogs-0.01/
----
WebService-Aladdin-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~jeen/WebService-Aladdin-0.01/
Aladdin WebService API Module 
----
WebService-Aladdin-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~jeen/WebService-Aladdin-0.03/
Aladdin WebService API Module 
----
WebService-Aladdin-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~jeen/WebService-Aladdin-0.05/
Aladdin WebService API Module 
----
WebService-Aladdin-0.06
http://search.cpan.org/~jeen/WebService-Aladdin-0.06/
Aladdin WebService API Module 
----
Win32-EventLog-0.076
http://search.cpan.org/~jdb/Win32-EventLog-0.076/
Process Win32 Event Logs from Perl 
----
Win32-NetAdmin-0.11
http://search.cpan.org/~jdb/Win32-NetAdmin-0.11/
Manage network groups and users in Perl 
----
Win32-Process-0.14
http://search.cpan.org/~jdb/Win32-Process-0.14/
Create and manipulate processes. 
----
X11-IdleTime-0.06
http://search.cpan.org/~awendt/X11-IdleTime-0.06/
Get the idle time of X11 
----
X3D-Values-Int32-0.003
http://search.cpan.org/~hooo/X3D-Values-Int32-0.003/
Perl extension for blah blah blah 
----
X3D-Values-Int32-0.003_001
http://search.cpan.org/~hooo/X3D-Values-Int32-0.003_001/
Perl extension for blah blah blah 
----
XIRCD-0.0.1
http://search.cpan.org/~mikihoshi/XIRCD-0.0.1/
----
XML-Bare-0.30
http://search.cpan.org/~codechild/XML-Bare-0.30/
Minimal XML parser implemented via a C state engine 
----
XML-RSS-Feed-2.32
http://search.cpan.org/~jbisbee/XML-RSS-Feed-2.32/
Persistant XML RSS Encapsulation 


If you're an author of one of these modules, please submit a detailed
announcement to comp.lang.perl.announce, and we'll pass it along.

This message was generated by a Perl program described in my Linux
Magazine column, which can be found on-line (along with more than
200 other freely available past column articles) at
  http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col82.html

print "Just another Perl hacker," # the original

--
Randal L. Schwartz - Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc. - +1 503 777 0095
<merlyn@stonehenge.com> <URL:http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/>
Smalltalk/Perl/Unix consulting, Technical writing, Comedy, etc. etc.
See http://methodsandmessages.vox.com/ for Smalltalk and Seaside discussion


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

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:

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#
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NOTE: due to the current flood of worm email banging on ruby, the smtp
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To submit articles to comp.lang.perl.announce, send your article to
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------------------------------
End of Perl-Users Digest V11 Issue 1687
***************************************


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