Well, being a poet with a really nice grasp of English vocabulary should assist in becoming a conversant to fluent Perl programmer. Perl is very sensitive to context and has a plethora of its own vocabulary. Some people in fact deride it for these things, but others revel in them. My impression of you from this thread is that if you apply yourself to learning Perl's vocabulary and grammar as you have to those of English, you will be a master. All it takes is time, effort, a bit of intelligence, and the ability to handle symbolic thought. You're clearly, then, well on your way. Take heart and take practice, and you'll be writing like an old hand soon.
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Thanks for this & I hope you are right. It would be great if I could find shiny new reasons to not regret the time I have spent with poetry and theatre.
When I was a teacher I used to tell my students "nothing is wasted," and really _believe_ it, but I'd go off and have a bout of regret anyway over not having studied astronomy, or mathematics (or whatever).
But there _really are_ are many roads to enlightenment.
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use Class::Date qw(date -DateParse);
$Class::Date::DATE_FORMAT="%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S";
print date('2008/01/01 10:00:00') + 300, "\n", date('2008-01-01 10:00:
+00') + '5m';
update: golf opened ;)
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