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My favourite book on OO in Perl has always been Randal Schwartz's Learning Perl Objects, References and Modules.

It provides many of the necessary bits you need to understand not only about OO, but about some of the important items related to it for a well-rounded explanation.

It's been several years since I've read it, and although published in 2012, is still very valuable. I recall some of the examples were fun.

After you understand Perl's built-in OO functionality, you'll be able to start looking at some of the distributions that wrap the functionality with an easier (some say) and more feature-rich interface (Moo for example).

Personally, for the vast majority of my projects, I use straight Perl OO.

Update: The book I mentioned is strictly Perl, but honestly, once you have the basic concepts down, you'll pretty well understand it for translation to any other OO language (obviously syntax and several other aspects will differ).


In reply to Re: New to perl - Check authenticity of cpan mods installed/used by stevieb
in thread New to perl - Check authenticity of cpan mods installed/used by gradius85

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