Mastering Perl

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Description


Mastering Perl

Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Number Of Pages: 342
Publication Date: 2007-07-16
Sales Rank: 130890
ISBN / ASIN: 0596527241
EAN: 9780596527242
Binding: Paperback
Manufacturer: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Studio: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Average Rating: 4.5


This is the third in O'Reilly's series of landmark Perl tutorials, which started with Learning Perl, the bestselling introduction that taught you the basics of Perl syntax, and Intermediate Perl, which taught you how to create re-usable Perl software. Mastering Perl pulls everything together to show you how to bend Perl to your will. It convey's Perl's special models and programming idioms.

This book isn't a collection of clever tricks, but a way of thinking about Perl programming so you can integrate the real-life problems of debugging, maintenance, configuration, and other tasks you encounter as a working programmer.

The book explains how to:

Use advanced regular expressions, including global matches, lookarounds, readable regexes, and regex debugging
Avoid common programing problems with secure programming techniques
Profile and benchmark Perl to find out where to focus your improvements
Wrangle Perl code to make it more presentable and readable
See how Perl keeps track of package variables and how you can use that for some powerful tricks
Define subroutines on the fly and turn the tables on normal procedural programming.
Modify and jury rig modules to fix code without editing the original source
Let your users configure your programs without touching the code
Learn how you can detect errors Perl doesn't report, and how to tell users about them
Let your Perl program talk back to you by using Log4perl
Store data for later use in another program, a later run of the same program, or to send them over a network
Write programs as modules to get the benefit of Perl's distribution and testing tools
Appendices include "brian's Guide to Solving Any Perl Problem" to improve your troubleshooting skills, as well as suggested reading to continue your Perl education. Mastering Perl starts you on your path to becoming the person with the answers, and, failing that, the person who knows how to find the answers or discover the problem.

Review:

Essential follow-up reading to The Llama and The Alpaca

If you've made it through Learning Perl and Intermediate Perl, you've probably been waiting with no small impatience for a book like this to round off the trilogy and your basic Perl education. If you're interested in Perl as a complete programming language, or want to be able to read and understand the rest of the Perl literature, then you need this.

Note that the thrust of the book is about providing the information you need to use Perl to build applications, so there's nothing about Perl internals, or embedding Perl or dropping down to C to speed things up. For that sort of thing, you might want to look at the various editions of Advanced Perl Programming.

Stylistically, Mastering Perl is a bit of a departure from the previous two books in the series. Gone is the tutorial feel, and there's no overarching pop culture theme to the examples. Instead, you're assumed to be competent and ready to develop your own code, and brian d foy's style treats the reader as an equal.

There are two types of material covered in the book. The first rounds off the rest of the Perl language not covered in the first two books. These are all things which are not exactly necessary for every day programming, but which anyone motivated sufficiently to learn enough Perl to be interested in this book will just want to know. Typeglobs, the symbol table and tied variables top this list. Additionally, there are excellent chapters on error handling and advanced regular expressions, the latter of which introduces the options and anchors used in lexing, and look-ahead and look-behind assertions.

The other material covers useful libraries for developing in Perl. Examples include chapters devoted to documentation with POD, serialization, logging, debugging, profiling, and benchmarking. These are all comprehensive and use fairly long examples with non-trivial code.

You could cobble together a minority of the material presented in this book from other sources (e.g. some of the stuff on ties or the symbol table), such as Effective Perl Programming, Perl Medic, Perl Debugged or Object Oriented Perl (and there's a helpful Appendix which recommends several such books as further reading), but having it presented here in one cohesive whole is a far superior learning experience, thanks to the author's clear explanations and copious examples. Additionally, there's stuff here that you just won't find in those other books (e.g. do you know what the PROPAGATE method does on an object?). I'd like to think I've read most of the important Perl books, but I still learnt a lot, and it filled in a lot of holes. It's bang up to date, too, which many of the other books you'd otherwise be relying on can't claim to be.

Overall, this fills a gaping void in the Perl literature and provides a suitable bridge between Intermediate Perl and the likes of Perl Cookbook and Perl Best Practices. It's an excellent, focussed book which provides almost everything you need to do real Perl programming.


Review:

A worthy addition to the O'Reilly Perl series

I work with the language on a daily basis, and the information that I learned from this book has helped me to become an even better programmer. The chapter covering regular expressions was the most helpful, as it broke down all of the various assertions and explained them in a simple and easy to understand manner.

brian's writing is clear and easy to read, making this book an invaluable reference for me.


Review:

it's a very good book

Mastering Perl is a toolbox full of very sharp tools. I can imagine myself presenting it to a junior co-worker, very somberly informing him, "It is time."

More likely, actually, I'd present him a few chapters ripped out of the book and rebound. It's not that there are chapters I object to, or that don't matter. It's that some of the chapters are about safety and responsibility, while others are about wielding deadly weapons. I want up-and-coming Perl programmers to know about taint mode, debugging, profiling, and good code formatting long before typeglobs, ties, or AutoSplit. I'd divide the chapters into "things you must learn to become a master of the language" and "things you had better know if you want to be considered a good professional."

The chapters are not particularly cumulative, and can be read out of order. If you're ready for the book in general -- which basically only means understanding the basics of packages, references, regex, objects, and closures -- you're ready for any chapter at any time. I read the chapters in order, and I was glad to switch between technical and procedural topics. It let my brain rest a little between bouts of dense code.

My main concern is the lack of warning given on a number of tools discussed. brian begins, in the first chapter, by saying that coverage does not mean endorsement, but I don't think that's quite strong enough in some cases. The first chapter discusses some regular expression techniques, and casually mentions using $&, with no mention of the long-standing performance bug this introduces. Maybe I'm being silly, but it seems like such an easy and worthwhile thing to mention -- especially since the section in which $& is discussed is actually about @-, which can be used to efficiently replace $&. (As a side note, while reading this chapter, on what was effectively the fourth page of the book's real material, I saw $#- casually used in some code. That is when I realized that this book was not going to screw around.)

Another chapter is devoted to tied variables, which are fantastically fun, but can also be a major source of headaches. Maybe brian's thinking is that any real master will be able to make his own judgement on the subject. Still, without an included warning about the danger of a few topics, I'll definitely have to red ink a few margin notes on the office copy.

My worries about sharp tools, though, are far outweight by the excellent explanations of the features covered by the book. brian's explanation of a few features of Perl really, really cleared a few things up for me. I feel fairly at home in Perl, but there are a number of features that I've always felt were never going to stick with me, and that I'd always need to refer to the docs on. Among these were the regex position bits (/g, /c, and G), which I've used, but always with perldoc open; also, pack, which I've only ever used in its simplest form. After reading the explanations of both in Mastering Perl, I almost didn't notice that I had quietly internalized the concepts. One of my notes actually reads, "p219: pack: I get it now!"

I think this is because of the extremely straight-forward presentation of the material. It doesn't go to great lengths to create elaborate scenarios. It says, "Here is a feature. This is how it works. Here are a few examples. Now you understand." brian's paragraph on pack was far, far more useful as a learning tool than the four hundred lines of pack documentation in perldoc. What's even better, though, is that now I can look at that perldoc and understand everything it says quite easily.

This kind of excellent, straightfoward explanation of fairly complex topics is present throughout the book, and is the best reason to pick it up.

Finally, I had a few typographical quibbles with the book. There are a number of footnotes throughout the book, and that's fine, but rather than using numbers or sticking to a commonly-seen set of characters, the footnote markers are unusual. I think it progresses in each chapter: asterisk, dagger, double-dagger, funky || symbol, and possibly others. The asterisk looks lousy and the || is just weird, and not immediately obvious as a footnote marker. I don't understand the thinking. Much worse, though, the monospace at sign (@) used in printing the book is from another planet. It hardly looks like an at sign at all. Given the quantity of @'s seen in Perl code, this is extremely distracting, and should really be fixed before O'Reilly prints more Perl books.

So, I had a few concerns about journeymen programmers picking up dangerous tools, and I didn't like the at sign. These are pretty small concerns, in the end, when compared with the quality of the material. It's very clear, and covers most of the topics I'd expect in a book like this, and covers most of them quite thoroughly. I'd want this on the shelf at any office that might hire non-masters, and I'd want those employees to have their hearts set on one day understanding everything in Mastering Perl.

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