in reply to Re: How to use the -T file op as a one-liner
in thread How to use the -T file op as a one-liner

You guys just made my day: Ken (kcott) answers Ken (kwolcott) ... and both with "cott" in their surnames! :)

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Re^3: How to use the -T file op as a one-liner
by Bod (Parson) on Aug 13, 2023 at 21:59 UTC
    Ken (kcott) answers Ken (kwolcott)

    I too noticed that before parsing the question...
    For a moment I thought kcott was using a pseudonym and talking to himself...

      For a moment I thought kcott was using a pseudonym and talking to himself...

      Ha ha, after spending way too much time recently studying Perl Monks early history, my first reaction was that kwolcott was an alter ego of kcott! ... was this another erzuuli prank? :)

      Update: Just noticed clscott from Ottawa Canada. Another alter ego? Perhaps Ken's brother Clayton? :)

      Update (Feb 2024): Ken's brother David has just joined Perl Monks: dcscott

      Though strictly against site rules today, it was surprisingly common for early Perl Monk developers to use alter egos for testing. The first six meditations (node ids: 484-489), for example, are all owned by Master Aalnan, an alter ego of nate, the guy who wrote the Everything web system.

        Though strictly against site rules today, it was surprisingly common for early Perl Monk developers to use alter egos for testing

        Most of the systems I have written and/or manage have an account for Boomer, the office hound. He has his own email address and is good at proof reading emails as well as testing how features work on accounts with non-admin privileges...