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Perl-Users Digest, Issue: 2398 Volume: 11

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Thu May 7 03:09:46 2009

Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 00:09:05 -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, 7 May 2009     Volume: 11 Number: 2398

Today's topics:
        new CPAN modules on Thu May  7 2009 (Randal Schwartz)
    Re: Perl OLE Excel 2003 Problem with freezepane, <g4774g@gmail.com>
        Perl version 5.006001 <someone@somewhere.nb.ca>
    Re: Perl version 5.006001 <ben@morrow.me.uk>
    Re: Perl version 5.006001 <tadmc@seesig.invalid>
        printing html with perl <someone@somewhere.nb.ca>
    Re: printing html with perl <nat.k@gm.ml>
    Re: printing html with perl <tadmc@seesig.invalid>
    Re: printing html with perl <xhoster@gmail.com>
    Re: printing html with perl <kkeller-usenet@wombat.san-francisco.ca.us>
    Re: printing html with perl <sbryce@scottbryce.com>
    Re: searching directory based on csv file <josef.moellers@ts.fujitsu.com>
        Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01) (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)

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

Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 04:42:27 GMT
From: merlyn@stonehenge.com (Randal Schwartz)
Subject: new CPAN modules on Thu May  7 2009
Message-Id: <KJ9Bqr.4uz@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.

Authen-CAS-Client-0.04
http://search.cpan.org/~pravus/Authen-CAS-Client-0.04/
Provides an easy-to-use interface for authentication using JA-SIG's Central Authentication Service 
----
CPAN-DistnameInfo-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~gbarr/CPAN-DistnameInfo-0.08/
Extract distribution name and version from a distribution filename 
----
CairoX-CuttingLine-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~cornelius/CairoX-CuttingLine-0.05/
draw cutting line to cairo surface 
----
Catalyst-Controller-WrapCGI-0.0036
http://search.cpan.org/~rkitover/Catalyst-Controller-WrapCGI-0.0036/
Run CGIs in Catalyst 
----
Catalyst-Controller-WrapCGI-0.0037
http://search.cpan.org/~rkitover/Catalyst-Controller-WrapCGI-0.0037/
Run CGIs in Catalyst 
----
ClearCase-Argv-1.45
http://search.cpan.org/~dsb/ClearCase-Argv-1.45/
ClearCase-specific subclass of Argv 
----
Convert-zBase32-0.0201
http://search.cpan.org/~gwyn/Convert-zBase32-0.0201/
Convert human-oriented base-32 encoded strings 
----
Data-Tabular-Dumper-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~gwyn/Data-Tabular-Dumper-0.08/
Seamlessly dump tabular data to XML, CSV and XLS. 
----
Dataninja-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~jasonmay/Dataninja-0.01/
Yet Another IRC Bot to do your bidding 
----
Dist-Zilla-1.091250
http://search.cpan.org/~rjbs/Dist-Zilla-1.091250/
distribution builder; installer not included! 
----
Dist-Zilla-1.091260
http://search.cpan.org/~rjbs/Dist-Zilla-1.091260/
distribution builder; installer not included! 
----
Dist-Zilla-PluginBundle-RJBS-0.091260
http://search.cpan.org/~rjbs/Dist-Zilla-PluginBundle-RJBS-0.091260/
BeLike::RJBS when you build your dists 
----
Elive-0.14
http://search.cpan.org/~warringd/Elive-0.14/
Elluminate Live (c) client library 
----
Exception-Class-1.28
http://search.cpan.org/~drolsky/Exception-Class-1.28/
A module that allows you to declare real exception classes in Perl 
----
Geo-Distance-XS-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~gray/Geo-Distance-XS-0.03/
speed up Geo::Distance 
----
Geo-Gpx-0.25
http://search.cpan.org/~andya/Geo-Gpx-0.25/
Create and parse GPX files. 
----
GnuPG-0.09_01
http://search.cpan.org/~robbiebow/GnuPG-0.09_01/
Perl module interface to the GNU Privacy Guard. 
----
GnuPG-0.09_02
http://search.cpan.org/~robbiebow/GnuPG-0.09_02/
Perl module interface to the GNU Privacy Guard. 
----
Goo-Canvas-0.06
http://search.cpan.org/~yewenbin/Goo-Canvas-0.06/
Perl interface to the GooCanvas 
----
HTML-Mason-1.41
http://search.cpan.org/~drolsky/HTML-Mason-1.41/
High-performance, dynamic web site authoring system 
----
Hosts-Setting-Confirmation
http://search.cpan.org/~yamakura/Hosts-Setting-Confirmation/
The tool which confirms setting between hosts done a connection of in OPEN SSh 
----
Hosts-Setting-Confirmation-0.00001_00
http://search.cpan.org/~yamakura/Hosts-Setting-Confirmation-0.00001_00/
The tool which confirms setting between hosts done a connection of in OPEN SSh 
----
IPC-Exe-1.007
http://search.cpan.org/~glai/IPC-Exe-1.007/
Execute processes or Perl subroutines & string them via IPC. Think shell pipes. 
----
JiftyX-Fixtures-0.06
http://search.cpan.org/~shelling/JiftyX-Fixtures-0.06/
Insert fixtures into your Jifty application database 
----
JiftyX-Fixtures-0.07
http://search.cpan.org/~shelling/JiftyX-Fixtures-0.07/
Insert fixtures into your Jifty application database 
----
MOSES-MOBY-0.90
http://search.cpan.org/~ekawas/MOSES-MOBY-0.90/
Perl extension for the automatic generation of BioMOBY web services 
----
Mail-Builder-Simple-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~teddy/Mail-Builder-Simple-0.08/
Send UTF-8 HTML and text email with attachments and inline images, eventually using templates 
----
Math-Random-ISAAC-XS-1.0.4
http://search.cpan.org/~frequency/Math-Random-ISAAC-XS-1.0.4/
C implementation of the ISAAC PRNG Algorithm 
----
Module-Install-0.87
http://search.cpan.org/~adamk/Module-Install-0.87/
Standalone, extensible Perl module installer 
----
Module-Install-ReadmeFromPod-0.06
http://search.cpan.org/~bingos/Module-Install-ReadmeFromPod-0.06/
A Module::Install extension to automatically convert POD to a README 
----
MongoDB-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~flora/MongoDB-0.01/
A Mongo Driver for Perl 
----
MooseX-NonMoose-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~doy/MooseX-NonMoose-0.03/
easy subclassing of non-Moose classes 
----
Muldis-D-0.68.0
http://search.cpan.org/~duncand/Muldis-D-0.68.0/
Formal spec of Muldis D relational DBMS lang 
----
MySQL-Admin-0.44
http://search.cpan.org/~lze/MySQL-Admin-0.44/
Mysql Administrator and more 
----
MySQL-Easy-2.1000
http://search.cpan.org/~jettero/MySQL-Easy-2.1000/
Perl extension to handle various mundane DBI session related things specific to mysql. 
----
Net-Lookup-DotTel-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~zebaz/Net-Lookup-DotTel-0.02/
Look up information related to a .tel domain name (or possible another domain name having .tel-style TXT and NAPTR records). 
----
Net-Mollom-0.06
http://search.cpan.org/~wonko/Net-Mollom-0.06/
interface with Mollom web API 
----
OpenResty-0.5.8
http://search.cpan.org/~agent/OpenResty-0.5.8/
General-purpose web service platform for web applications 
----
OpenResty-0.5.9
http://search.cpan.org/~agent/OpenResty-0.5.9/
General-purpose web service platform for web applications 
----
PDF-FDF-Simple-0.20
http://search.cpan.org/~schwigon/PDF-FDF-Simple-0.20/
Read and write (Acrobat) FDF files. 
----
POE-Component-Daemon-0.1008
http://search.cpan.org/~gwyn/POE-Component-Daemon-0.1008/
Handles all the housework for a daemon. 
----
POE-Component-Generic-0.1201
http://search.cpan.org/~gwyn/POE-Component-Generic-0.1201/
A POE component that provides non-blocking access to a blocking object. 
----
POE-Component-IKC-0.2102
http://search.cpan.org/~gwyn/POE-Component-IKC-0.2102/
POE Inter-Kernel Communication 
----
POE-Component-Win32-EventLog-1.24
http://search.cpan.org/~bingos/POE-Component-Win32-EventLog-1.24/
A POE component that provides non-blocking access to Win32::EventLog. 
----
POE-Component-Win32-Service-1.24
http://search.cpan.org/~bingos/POE-Component-Win32-Service-1.24/
A POE component that provides non-blocking access to Win32::Service. 
----
Padre-Plugin-Debugger-0.1
http://search.cpan.org/~pmakholm/Padre-Plugin-Debugger-0.1/
Debug Perl code from Padre editor 
----
Padre-Plugin-Perl6-0.37
http://search.cpan.org/~azawawi/Padre-Plugin-Perl6-0.37/
Padre plugin for Perl6 
----
PostScript-PPD-0.0201
http://search.cpan.org/~gwyn/PostScript-PPD-0.0201/
Read PostScript Printer Definition files 
----
Privileges-Drop-1.01
http://search.cpan.org/~tlbdk/Privileges-Drop-1.01/
A module to make it simple to drop all privileges, even POSIX groups. 
----
Rose-HTML-Objects-0.603
http://search.cpan.org/~jsiracusa/Rose-HTML-Objects-0.603/
Object-oriented interfaces for HTML. 
----
SVG-Sparkline-0.3
http://search.cpan.org/~gwadej/SVG-Sparkline-0.3/
Create Sparklines in SVG 
----
Sphinx-Search-0.22
http://search.cpan.org/~jjschutz/Sphinx-Search-0.22/
Sphinx search engine API Perl client 
----
String-Similarity-Group-1.10
http://search.cpan.org/~leocharre/String-Similarity-Group-1.10/
take a list of strings and segregate by similarity 
----
Syntax-Highlight-Perl6-0.52
http://search.cpan.org/~azawawi/Syntax-Highlight-Perl6-0.52/
Perl 6 Syntax Highlighter 


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: Wed, 6 May 2009 14:38:33 -0700 (PDT)
From: Graig <g4774g@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Perl OLE Excel 2003 Problem with freezepane,
Message-Id: <2f70de88-aca8-4c5b-9c73-dff229cdcaa0@a5g2000pre.googlegroups.com>


Your example works, but of course the split on the first row causes
the first row to replicate.

What I was trying to do is just freeze the 2nd row, keeping the header
row when scrolling. Perhaps it can not be done programmatically.

Your solution to my 2nd problem was great.

Thanks.


On 4 May, 13:58, "A. Sinan Unur" <1...@llenroc.ude.invalid> wrote:
> Graig <g47...@gmail.com> wrote in news:116f3dba-0e20-4a1e-b700-
> 3b404d9ab...@k9g2000pra.googlegroups.com:
>
> > On Windows XP, perl 5.10, Excel 2003, Win32 OLE.
>
> > No problems with perl creating an Excel spreadsheet, everything seems
> > to work quite well. The two problem that =A0still remains is:
>
> > 1) I am trying to freeze pane at row 2:
>
> > =A0 my $freeze_panes =3D $gExcel->ActiveSheet->Range("2:2")->Select;
> > =A0 #$gSheet->Cells(2,2)->Select();
> > =A0 $gExcel->ActiveSheet->{FreezePanes} =3D $TRUE;
>
> Selecting does not help. You have to tell Excel the row and column where
> the split should occur. See below.
>
> > 2) The second problem is that I want to detect if when starting my
> > script, is Excel already running? What can happen is that the user
> > abnormally terminates, and leaves a copy of Excel in memory. The only
> > way to detect this is using MS Task Manager, and kill the excel
> > process. I'd like my perl script to see if excel is running when it
> > first comes up, so that I can prompt the user to close excel...
>
> Why do you want the user to close Excel? You can instead just get the
> already running instance.
>
> #!/usr/bin/perl
>
> use strict;
> use warnings;
>
> use File::Spec::Functions qw( catfile );
>
> use Win32::OLE;
> use Win32::OLE::Const 'Microsoft Excel';
> $Win32::OLE::Warn =3D 3;
>
> my $excel =3D get_excel();
> $excel->{Visible} =3D 1;
>
> my $book =3D $excel->Workbooks->Add;
> my $sheet =3D $book->Worksheets->Add;
>
> $excel->ActiveWindow->{SplitRow} =3D 0;
> $excel->ActiveWindow->{SplitColumn} =3D 2;
> $excel->ActiveWindow->{FreezePanes} =3D 1;
>
> $book->SaveAs(catfile $ENV{TEMP}, 'test.xls');
> $book->Close(0);
>
> sub get_excel {
> =A0 =A0 my $excel;
> =A0 =A0 eval {
> =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 $excel =3D Win32::OLE->GetActiveObject('Excel.Application=
');
> =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 warn "got already active Excel\n";
> =A0 =A0 };
>
> =A0 =A0 die "$@\n" if $@;
>
> =A0 =A0 unless(defined $excel) {
> =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 $excel =3D Win32::OLE->new('Excel.Application',
> =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 sub {=
 $_[0]->Quit }
> =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 ) or die "Oops, cannot start Excel: ",
> =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0Win32::OLE->LastError, "\n";
> =A0 =A0 }
> =A0 =A0 return $excel;
>
> }
>
> --
> A. Sinan Unur <1...@llenroc.ude.invalid>
> (remove .invalid and reverse each component for email address)
>
> comp.lang.perl.misc guidelines on the WWW:http://www.rehabitation.com/clp=
misc/



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

Date: Wed, 6 May 2009 20:07:46 -0300
From: "Guy" <someone@somewhere.nb.ca>
Subject: Perl version 5.006001
Message-Id: <4a021836$0$23766$9a566e8b@news.aliant.net>

I am using Perl scripts on a remote (web) server, and I'm just curious what 
version of Perl the server has.  I would do a Perl -v if I had access to its 
command prompt, but I don't.  So I ran the following scripts and it spit out 
5.006001.  Have there been many upgrades since?  It's not my server so I 
wouldn't be able to upgrade it anyway. But I'm just wondering if I would be 
missing out of major things?
Guy

#!/usr/bin/perl
$command= $];
$title = "Perl Version";

print "Content-type: text/html\n\n";
print "<html><head><title>$title</title></head><body>";

print "<h1>$title</h1>\n";
print "Perl version : ".$command; 




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

Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 00:51:06 +0100
From: Ben Morrow <ben@morrow.me.uk>
Subject: Re: Perl version 5.006001
Message-Id: <ack9d6-lla.ln1@osiris.mauzo.dyndns.org>


Quoth "Guy" <someone@somewhere.nb.ca>:
> I am using Perl scripts on a remote (web) server, and I'm just curious what 
> version of Perl the server has.  I would do a Perl -v if I had access to its 
> command prompt, but I don't.  So I ran the following scripts and it spit out 
> 5.006001.  Have there been many upgrades since?  It's not my server so I 
> wouldn't be able to upgrade it anyway. But I'm just wondering if I would be 
> missing out of major things?

Um. Yes.

Perl 5.6.1 was released in 2001. There have been two major stable
releases of perl since then (5.8 and 5.10), and numerous improvements.
Now that 5.10 is considered 'stable', it's getting to the point where
CPAN authors are starting to drop support for 5.6 right and left.

You would be well advised to find some way of getting it upgraded to at
least 5.8.8 (released in 2006). 5.10.0 would be better.

See the perl*delta files in the perl source distribution (you can look
at them on search.cpan.org) for an overview of what's changed in each
version.

Ben



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

Date: Wed, 6 May 2009 18:59:46 -0500
From: Tad J McClellan <tadmc@seesig.invalid>
Subject: Re: Perl version 5.006001
Message-Id: <slrnh0493i.8up.tadmc@tadmc30.sbcglobal.net>

Guy <someone@somewhere.nb.ca> wrote:
> I am using Perl scripts on a remote (web) server, and I'm just curious what 
> version of Perl the server has.  I would do a Perl -v if I had access to its 
> command prompt, but I don't.  So I ran the following scripts 


If you can run scripts (CGI, I assume) then you _do_ have access
to a shell (command line);

#!/usr/bin/perl
print "Content-type: text/plain\n\n";
system 'perl -v';

:-)


> and it spit out 
> 5.006001.  Have there been many upgrades since?  


A whole boatload of them.

    perldoc perlhist

shows that 5.6 was released many years ago:

    5.6.0         2000-Mar-22
    ...
    5.6.1         2001-Apr-08

A lot has happened in 8 years...


-- 
Tad McClellan
email: perl -le "print scalar reverse qq/moc.noitatibaher\100cmdat/"


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

Date: Wed, 6 May 2009 21:43:53 -0300
From: "Guy" <someone@somewhere.nb.ca>
Subject: printing html with perl
Message-Id: <4a022ebc$0$23750$9a566e8b@news.aliant.net>

For those who use Perl to generate HTML pages...

I just started reading CGI Programming with Perl by Guelich Gundavaram and 
Birznieks, and I learned that you can generate HTML codes with CGI.pm, such 
as the following but it sounds strange to me because you would have to learn 
a new HTML syntax.

print $q->start_html(-title=> "My Site" );

I have learned about here documents which uses << followed by a token.  This 
appears easier to me.

Are there any advantages to using CGI.pm in this case?
Guy






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

Date: Wed, 06 May 2009 18:04:30 -0700
From: Nathan Keel <nat.k@gm.ml>
Subject: Re: printing html with perl
Message-Id: <ysqMl.8556$CN5.3283@newsfe23.iad>

Guy wrote:

> For those who use Perl to generate HTML pages...
> 
> I just started reading CGI Programming with Perl by Guelich Gundavaram
> and Birznieks, and I learned that you can generate HTML codes with
> CGI.pm, such as the following but it sounds strange to me because you
> would have to learn a new HTML syntax.
> 
> print $q->start_html(-title=> "My Site" );
> 
> I have learned about here documents which uses << followed by a token.
>  This appears easier to me.
> 
> Are there any advantages to using CGI.pm in this case?
> Guy

It depends on what you're doing.  I think most tag names are similar or
the same, but just use normal heredocs's and HTML how you do now.  The
CGI module can save some time and coding and do things for you and be
consistent, but that doesn't mean it's necessary or better.


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

Date: Wed, 6 May 2009 20:44:01 -0500
From: Tad J McClellan <tadmc@seesig.invalid>
Subject: Re: printing html with perl
Message-Id: <slrnh04f71.aeb.tadmc@tadmc30.sbcglobal.net>

Guy <someone@somewhere.nb.ca> wrote:


> I learned that you can generate HTML codes with CGI.pm,

> Are there any advantages to using CGI.pm in this case?


I always use CGI.pm for parsing form arguments.

I never use CGI.pm for generating HTML.

I often use CGI.pm for other things.


-- 
Tad McClellan
email: perl -le "print scalar reverse qq/moc.noitatibaher\100cmdat/"


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

Date: Wed, 06 May 2009 19:21:05 -0700
From: Xho Jingleheimerschmidt <xhoster@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: printing html with perl
Message-Id: <4a024598$0$7412$ed362ca5@nr5-q3a.newsreader.com>

Guy wrote:
> For those who use Perl to generate HTML pages...
> 
> I just started reading CGI Programming with Perl by Guelich Gundavaram and 
> Birznieks, and I learned that you can generate HTML codes with CGI.pm, such 
> as the following but it sounds strange to me because you would have to learn 
> a new HTML syntax.
> 
> print $q->start_html(-title=> "My Site" );

In my hands, this generates a DOCTYPE, an <html>, a <title></title>, 
plus some stuff about a content type and character set, and a <body>. 
So it seems to cover quite a bit of HTML syntax that I've never bothered 
to learn.  How important all that stuff is, I don't know.

Also, any special characters in your -title string will automatically 
get HTML encoded.  Whether this is a good thing depends on what you want 
to happen, but I generally consider it a good thing.

> I have learned about here documents which uses << followed by a token.  This 
> appears easier to me.

It appears orthogonal to me.  You can use << with nothing but a print, 
or you can use it inside a start_html.

print $q->start_html(-title=> << END);
My site
END


Xho


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

Date: Wed, 6 May 2009 20:48:32 -0700
From: Keith Keller <kkeller-usenet@wombat.san-francisco.ca.us>
Subject: Re: printing html with perl
Message-Id: <h92ad6xkvv.ln2@goaway.wombat.san-francisco.ca.us>

On 2009-05-07, Tad J McClellan <tadmc@seesig.invalid> wrote:
>
> I always use CGI.pm for parsing form arguments.
>
> I never use CGI.pm for generating HTML.

There are some cute features of CGI.pm.  For example, you can feed
list-like elements, like li(), an arrayref, and it'll generate all the
HTML for you:

print $cgi->li([1,2,3,4]);

prints

<li>1</li> <li>2</li> <li>3</li> <li>4</li>

Of course if you are using a real templating system it should already
have ways of doing this, too.

> I often use CGI.pm for other things.

There isn't much else to CGI.pm, is there?

--keith

-- 
kkeller-usenet@wombat.san-francisco.ca.us
(try just my userid to email me)
AOLSFAQ=http://www.therockgarden.ca/aolsfaq.txt
see X- headers for PGP signature information



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

Date: Wed, 06 May 2009 23:23:35 -0600
From: Scott Bryce <sbryce@scottbryce.com>
Subject: Re: printing html with perl
Message-Id: <gttrc7$81d$1@news.motzarella.org>

Guy wrote:
> For those who use Perl to generate HTML pages...
> 
> I just started reading CGI Programming with Perl by Guelich
> Gundavaram and Birznieks, and I learned that you can generate HTML
> codes with CGI.pm, such as the following but it sounds strange to me
> because you would have to learn a new HTML syntax.
> 
> print $q->start_html(-title=> "My Site" );

I write a lot of CGI in Perl, but I never use CGI.pm to generate HTML.

> I have learned about here documents which uses << followed by a
> token.  This appears easier to me.

If you want to generate HTML pages in Perl, you would be much better off
using a templating system, such as HTML::Template. Using here documents
to generate HTML can get pretty messy pretty fast.

http://search.cpan.org/~samtregar/HTML-Template-2.9/Template.pm


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

Date: Thu, 07 May 2009 08:38:29 +0200
From: Josef Moellers <josef.moellers@ts.fujitsu.com>
Subject: Re: searching directory based on csv file
Message-Id: <gttvl5$9ej$2@nntp.fujitsu-siemens.com>

Tad J McClellan wrote:
> steve <Stephen.Schoenberger@gmail.com> wrote:

>> and search a given
>> directory for that filename. 
> 
> 
>     perldoc -f glob
>     perldoc -f opendir
>     perldoc -f readdir

If the file is somewhere a few levels deeper: File::Find.

-- 
These are my personal views and not those of Fujitsu Technology Solutions!
Josef Möllers (Pinguinpfleger bei FTS)
	If failure had no penalty success would not be a prize (T.  Pratchett)
Company Details: http://de.ts.fujitsu.com/imprint.html


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

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.  

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.


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End of Perl-Users Digest V11 Issue 2398
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