APM: Question about learning Perl

Mason Randall mason.randall at gmail.com
Fri Dec 6 20:29:56 PST 2013


Mark-

I learned similar to how several already listed -- the Learning Perl then
Perl (Alpaca) O'Reilly books. Those are great books and you can find
excellent exercises at the end of the Learning Perl chapters that make you
really apply what you have just read about. Recently, I have recommended to
several people to use http://www.codechef.com/ as a source for finding
"projects" to work on and gotten feedback that it was helpful to them. Like
many said earlier, find something to do and do it. Make it happen.
Sometimes it's hard to think of things that will lead you to diverse
challenges, so the Learning Perl book and Code Chef can help supplement
that if you don't have a dog like Joe's Yardbird that can use a personal
web site.

Regards,

Mason


On Fri, Dec 6, 2013 at 4:31 PM, Axford, Joe <Jaxford at nextgen.com> wrote:

>  Mark,
>
>
>
> For me, working through the learning perl (llama) and most of the
> intermediate perl (alpaca) books, then finding perldoc::server to easily
> use perl documentation (I had no linux experience but I was learning), then
> working through some catalyst (and some dbix::class, html::formhandler,
> template::toolkit) docs, I came up with a project:
>
>
>
> yardbirdfanclub.org
>
>
>
> Then another project:
>
>
>
> http://blogs.perl.org/users/j0e/2013/02/notes-from-a-newbie.html
>
>
>
> By then I was well on my way to learning perl.
>
>
>
> You can get more details if you want to take the time to read this:
>
>
>
>
> http://blogs.perl.org/users/j0e/2013/05/notes-from-a-newbie-20-yapcna-2013-austin.html
>
>
>
> blogs.perl.org, irc.perl.org, perlweekly.com and lots of good people like
> t0m, mst, Peter Rabbitson, John Nap, Gabor and others helped me solve
> problems after I first did my best to solve them myself.
>
>
>
> It took some time and effort, good people and good resources – to include
> the Internet.
>
>
>
> Good luck!
>
>
>
> j0e
>
>
>
>      ------------------------------
>   *Joe* *Axford*
> R&D Maintenance Engineer
>
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>
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> *From:* Austin [mailto:austin-bounces+jaxford=nextgen.com at pm.org] *On
> Behalf Of *Mark Voltz
> *Sent:* Friday, December 06, 2013 1:52 PM
> *To:* Austin Perl Mongers
> *Subject:* APM: Question about learning Perl
>
>
>
> I hope this is an appropriate question for this group.
>
>
>
> At some point in your life you didn't know Perl (that's my assumption
> anyway).  What book/class/mentor... helped get you from beginner to
> wherever you are now?
>
>
>
> Was it a mixture of multiple influences?  Is there an indispensable Perl
> book that you all have on your shelves?
>
>
>
> I'm curious because I'd like to learn more Perl but I've got serious
> limitations on my time.  I don't want to shortcut the learning journey but
> I really don't want to pick up just any old book that may lead me down the
> wrong path.
>
>
>
> I guess I'd also like to know if there are materials to avoid as well.
>
>
>
> Thanks!
>
> Mark
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Austin mailing list
> Austin at pm.org
> http://mail.pm.org/mailman/listinfo/austin
>
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