Your list is interesting, because in my own case, your #2 (idioms, map, grep) came at #5, after everything else. I suppose that's because previous experience with C pointers made references easy, and experience with grep and awk did the same for regular expressions (though I agree that there's always more to learn about those). Also, you just can't do a lot of useful work without regexes, complex data structures, and CPAN.
You can get away without map/grep and other Perlish methods like statement modifiers, though, by using a lot of loops and making your code look like C or some other language. So I tend to think of the idiomatic stuff as the sign that someone's not just capable of programming in Perl, but comfortable with it.
I suppose everyone's list might be a little different, based on their own previous experience.
Aaron B.
Available for small or large Perl jobs; see my home node.
In reply to Re^2: Suggestions for getting a more solid understanding of Perl
by aaron_baugher
in thread Suggestions for getting a more solid understanding of Perl
by imlepid
| For: | Use: | ||
| & | & | ||
| < | < | ||
| > | > | ||
| [ | [ | ||
| ] | ] |