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No introductory guide can cover all of Perl, but Learning Perl cover all you need to get seriously productive: scalar data, lists, arrays, subroutines, I/O, hashes, control structures, strings, sorting, processes, and more. This edition s additions include a new chapter on Perl s invaluable CPAN archive, plus significantly improved coverage of regular expressions.
Learning Perl s exercises have been refined through live instruction to thousands of students; they re truly worth your time. They ll go a long way towards helping you achieve this book s core goal: not just to teach you Perl but to transform you into a Perl programmer. Bill Camarda, from the September 2005 href="http://www.barnesandnoble.com/newslet... Only
352 pages, Paperback
First published November 1, 1993
Now, if you're wondering how we can say that we've enjoyed writing it (in the past tense) when we're still on the first page, that's easy: we started at the end, and worked our way backwards. It sounds like a strange way to do it, we know. But, honestly, once we finished writing the index, the rest was hardly any trouble at all.