And if anyone shall come to you and say that he knows how to constru +ct bridges and that perhaps a time will come when you will wish to avai +l yourself of his science in order to cross over a river, out with him +! Out with the engineer! Rivers will be crossed by wading or swimming the +m, even if half the crusaders drown themselves. Let the engineer go off and + build bridges somewhere else, where they are badly wanted. For those who +go in quest of the sepulchre, faith is bridge enough. -- Miguel de Unamuno, "The Sepulchre of Don Quixote" It gives me great pleasure to announce the release of Perl 5.13.1. This is the second DEVELOPMENT release in the 5.13.x series leading to + a stable release of Perl 5.14.0. You can find a list of high-profile cha +nges in this release in the file "perl5131delta.pod" inside the distributio +n. You can (or will shortly be able to) download the 5.13.1 release from: http://search.cpan.org/~rjbs/perl-5.13.1/ The release's SHA1 signatures are: SHA1: 544bad790bbe8cacddc757dbede4c85263f1b72e perl-5.13.1.tar.gz SHA1: 9ebc45fc9dc9d5fabb73883c7fc68c91b3338695 perl-5.13.1.tar.bz2 This release corresponds to commit 464b2b3dcc in Perl's git repository +. It is tagged as 'v5.13.1'. We welcome your feedback on this release. If you discover issues with Perl 5.13.1, please use the 'perlbug' tool included in this distribution to report them. If Perl 5.13.1 works well for you, please use the 'perlthanks' tool included with this distribution to tell the all-volunteer development team how much you appreciate their work. If you write software in Perl, it is particularly important that you t +est your software against development releases. While we strive to maintai +n source compatibility with prior stable versions of Perl wherever possi +ble, it is always possible that a well-intentioned change can have unexpect +ed consequences. If you spot a change in a development version which brea +ks your code, it's much more likely that we will be able to fix it before + the next stable release. If you only test your code against stable release +s of Perl, it may not be possible to undo a backwards-incompatible chang +e which breaks your code. Perl 5.13.1 represents thirty days of development since Perl 5.13.0 an +d contains 15390 lines of changes across 289 files from 34 authors and committers. Thank you to the following for contributing to this release: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason, Arkturuz, Chris 'BinGOs' Williams, Craig A +. Berry, Curtis Jewell, Dan Dascalescu, David Golden, David Mitchell, Father Chrysostomos, Gene Sullivan, gfx, Gisle Aas, H.Merijn Brand, James E K +eenan, James Mastros, Jan Dubois, Jesse Vincent, Karl Williamson, Leon Brocar +d, Lubomir Rintel (GoodData), Nicholas Clark, Philippe Bruhat (BooK), Raf +ael Garcia-Suarez, Rainer Tammer, Ricardo Signes, Richard Soderberg, Robin + Barker, Ruslan Zakirov, Steffen Mueller, Todd Rinaldo, Tony Cook, Vincent Pit, + Zefram Many of the changes included in this version originated in the CPAN mo +dules included in Perl's core. We're grateful to the entire CPAN community f +or helping Perl to flourish. Notable changes in this release: * localized tied hashes, arrays, and scalars are no longer tied * "given" now returns the value of the last evaluated expression * die, warn, and $@ have been greatly simplified to eliminate long-sta +nding edge cases and action at a distance * Class::ISA, Pod::Plainer, and Switch have been removed from the core Development versions of Perl are released monthly on or about the 20th of the month by a monthly "release manager". You can expect following upcoming releases: June 20 - Matt Trout July 20 - David Golden August 20 - Florian Ragwitz -- rjbs
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