Chris Travers

Perl

Discussion & programming exchange for perl (and sister languag...
Feb 27, 2014 14:46
folks might find this blog post interesting I wrote in praise of Perl:
Feb 25, 2014 01:32
@amon Thanks :-)
Feb 24, 2014 15:35
@amon I think the response was "we are surprised it lasted this long."
Feb 24, 2014 15:30
(7.5 was renamed to 8.0 before it was released and evidently in five years they never upgraded beyond alpha)
Feb 24, 2014 15:29
@amon hahaha kind of like the guy who wrote to the PostgreSQL list complaining about database corruption on a PostgreSQL 7.5 server.....
Feb 24, 2014 15:05
I had no idea 5.6 was still in use
Feb 24, 2014 15:05
heh, got a message saying a module of mine failed a test run with Perl 5.6 via cpantesters.org today
 
Jan 20, 2014 09:06
are you familiar with Augustine's 16th Law?
Jan 20, 2014 09:06
HostileFork: Complexity sucks, and automation usually introduces more complexity.
Jan 18, 2014 03:37
@draegtun great. Now as a Perl 5 programmer, I look at it and think "Regular Expressions!"
Jan 17, 2014 13:27
@rebolek I totally agree. And then a hundred lines later, realizing things need to be re-optimized....
Jan 17, 2014 13:13
How does one write a 200k line web app while being so clueless? It must be quite a challenge haha
Jan 17, 2014 13:10
It was so bad what can you do but laugh? (but yes, he really said that)
Jan 17, 2014 13:10
ummm....
Jan 17, 2014 13:09
Really really stupid comments sent my way: "Did you ever bother to ask how someone could set cookies without a shell account on the web server?" :-P
Jan 17, 2014 13:09
Not to mention the wonderful politics when the author said nothing was wrong and I eventually took the exploit public :-P
Jan 17, 2014 13:08
@rebolek yeah. :-P
Jan 17, 2014 12:44
@rebolek yeah, it was pretty bad. And the worst part was, I had a customer using it, and I found a massive security flaw :-P
Jan 17, 2014 12:36
(the codebase also had noob mistakes at every level and the developer apparently spent ten years not learning how to program)
Jan 17, 2014 12:34
@rebolek Put it this way: Imagine code that wanders between modules with little rhyme or reason, outputs HTML as strings, concatenates SQL queries as strings, and has no discernable structure. Now imagine that the codebase is 200000 lines long.
Jan 17, 2014 12:32
well, words fail me.
Jan 17, 2014 12:32
@rebolek Perl 5 with good practices is actually ok. It's the fact that it is really easy to write code in a one-off mentality assuming you'll never look at it again. I have seen, however, Perl code that is so bad that.....
Jan 17, 2014 11:00
@rebolek one reason I can't ever imagine being a fan of Perl 6...
Jan 17, 2014 08:58
(for joining--- I think that's even quite a bit worse than the . since it is a legal character in variable names)
Jan 17, 2014 08:57
@rebolek It could be worse. Perl 6 uses the underscore.
Jan 16, 2014 13:23
Changed my picture
Jan 16, 2014 07:28
@HostileFork I am planning on it .
Jan 16, 2014 07:19
The video is interesting. I agree with a lot of his critique btw.
Jan 16, 2014 07:16
But living here in Indonesia has really changed my perspective on a lot of things.
Jan 16, 2014 07:15
watching it
Jan 16, 2014 07:12
@HostileFork I dunno. History seems pretty non-linear and full of twists and turns to me. The relative economic freedom and equality of the Middle Ages had to be disrupted to produce destitute workers for the factories in England for example.
Jan 16, 2014 07:10
(but the level of prison work over there may be a big part of the problem)
Jan 16, 2014 07:09
But then over here (Indonesia), we have people who go door to door selling noodles, meatballs, bread, cake, shoe repair services, tofu, etc. The differences to Western culture used to really bother me, but I have come to appreciate it. I don't know about China though. I keep hearing horror stories coming out of there, and that's kind of scary.
Jan 16, 2014 07:08
I think factories, like source code, should be owned at least in part by the people who work them, to be honest.
Jan 16, 2014 07:05
It depends on where you are. Here in Indonesia, for example, 70% of the population is self-employed and among the very poor in Jakarta, two things you don't see are hunger and a lack of shelter. There are certainly big problems for the poor, but in those two ways, the poor here are better off than they are in the US.
Jan 16, 2014 07:04
If you can make enough to afford reasonable safe housing and decent, balanced nutrition, then there isn't so much the big companies can do to tie you to them.
Jan 16, 2014 07:04
HostileFork, I think the largest protection workers can have in that regard is an easy way to make money working for themselves, to be honest.
Jan 16, 2014 04:45
there is a lot in a name. I am just saying that can be good though because it can mean that the central stable branch can still be the center even if the community takes off in another direction.
Jan 16, 2014 04:44
:-)
Jan 16, 2014 04:44
For LedgerSMB we have had up to three go-to repos at one point.
Jan 16, 2014 04:42
simpler politically.
Jan 16, 2014 04:42
But it reduces the communication overhead and keeps things for the stable branch to be....
Jan 16, 2014 04:42
If it can't be on rebol/rebol, let it be somewhere else.
Jan 16, 2014 04:41
That way you don't overburden Carl but you don't take away things from his hands either, and if the fork takes off people have a choice to go bleeding edge or more conservative.
Jan 16, 2014 04:40
2. Work on faciliating patches back from that one.
Jan 16, 2014 04:40
1. Designate some repository as a go-to one for development of new ideas. Build community around developing relating to that repository.
Jan 16, 2014 04:39
If that happens, what the community needs to do is this:
Jan 16, 2014 04:39
Hostilefork, here's my take as an open source software developer
Jan 16, 2014 04:35
How hard would it be to port the build process to r3 so it is self-hosted?