in reply to Have you netted a Perl Monk or Perl Pretender in 5 minutes or less?

Wow,

Thanks everyone for the response. I have some great ideas now for interviewing the applicants tomorrow. And judging by the questions you've provided I should be demoted from the Perl "Go-see" guy to the Perl "I-can-open-a-file-and-parse-it" guy.

I do have a login on this site, btw, but have forgotten my username password... :) Victor
  • Comment on Re: Have you netted a Perl Monk or Perl Pretender in 5 minutes or less?

Replies are listed 'Best First'.
Re^2: Have you netted a Perl Monk or Perl Pretender in 5 minutes or less?
by sfink (Deacon) on Sep 14, 2005 at 16:19 UTC
    That sounds like a great question to me -- ask them how they'd open a file and parse it. It may involve a bit of verbal punctuation, but you can easily wander off into the dis/advantages of using @ARGV and <> as opposed to opening the file manually, perhaps the distinction between while(<>) and while($_ = <>), error handling on the open, and a kazillion things related to parsing (roll-your-own XML parser, or use a module? DOM or SAX or XML::Parser? backslashed quotes in CSV files? when is good enough good enough? etc.)

    I work for Reactrix Systems, and am willing to admit it.