This book has been created for a number of reasons. The primary reason is to provide a freely redistributable tutorial for the Perl language. In writing this freely redistributable tutorial it is our hope that the largest number of people can have access to it and share it.
In the Perl community we have discovered ways to save time by writing Perl programs that make our jobs and lives easier. Surely Perl is not a panacea but it has certainly made our lives a little bit better. It is hoped that you can use Perl to make your jobs and lives easier too.
Thanks to all those who sent grammar fixes and feedback over the years. There are far too many of you to name here but I have tried to list you all in the `THANKS' file that comes with the transparent copy of this book.
This book is still under development. The most recent version can be obtained at http://www.ebb.org/PickingUpPerl.
This book does not that assume any prior knowledge of Perl. However a reader familiar with standard computer science concepts such as abstraction stacks queues and hash tables will definitely find her(1) way through this book with ease. In other words anyone with a knowledge equivalent to a first-year of college computer science courses should find this book very basic. Those of less experience may find this book challenging.
The material covered in this book is designed to prepare the reader to enter the world of Perl programming. This book covers the basic data and control structures of Perl as well as the philosophies behind Perl programming. The native search patterns used in Perl called regular expressions are introduced and discussed.
These concepts are introduced through the use of examples. It is hoped that readers find these examples fun.
In this text a variety of conventions are used to explain the material. Certain typographical and display elements are used for didactic purposes.
Any Perl code that is included directly in flowing text appears like
this: $x = 5. Any operating system commands discussed in flowing
text appear like this: program. Operating system files that
are discussed directly in the flowing text appear like this:
`file'. When a technical term of particular importance is first
introduced and explained
it appears in emphasized text
like this:
an important term.
When Perl code examples or operating system commands need to be separated away from the flowing text for emphasis or because the code is long it appears like this:
my $x = "foo"; # @cc{This is a Perl assignment}
print $x
\n
; # @cc{Print out "foo" and newline}
All Perl code shown in this manner will be valid in Perl
version
5.6.0. In most cases
you can paste code from one of
these sections into a Perl program
and the code should work
even under
use strict and use warnings.
Sometimes it will be necessary to include code that is not valid Perl. In this case a comment will appear right after the invalid statement indicating that it is not valid like this:
$x = "foo; # @cc{INVALID: a `"' character is missing}
When code that we set aside forms an entire Perl program that is self-contained and not simply a long example code section it will appear like this:
#!/usr/bin/perl use warnings; use strict; print "Hello World\n";
Finally
when text is given as possible output that might be given as
error messages when perl is run
they will appear like this:
Semicolon seems to be missing syntax error
Keep these standards in mind as you read this book.
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