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Perl: A Beginner's Guide
 
 

Perl: A Beginner's Guide [Paperback]

R. Allen Wyke , Donald B. Thomas
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

Essential skills for first-time programmers! Perl: A Beginner's Guide will teach you the fundamentals of Perl programming. It covers Perl capabilities and syntax, accessing databases, working with modules, CGI programming, debugging and much more. This beginner's guide is designed for easy learning: Modules: Each programming concept is divided into logical modules (chapters), ideal for linear learning Goals: Each module opens with the specific programming skills you’ll have by the end of the module Ask the Experts: Q&A sections throughout 1-Minute Drills: Quick self-assessment sections to check your progress Annotated Syntax: Example code annotated with commentary that points to the particular technique illustrated Projects: Coding exercises contained in each module that build on one another, from simple to complex Mastery Checks: End-of-module reviews that test proficiency using multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blank, and simple coding questions

Book Info

(Osborne) A complete tutorial in Perl programming, for first-time programmers. Covers fundamentals like syntax and subroutines, moving on to explain how to access databases, write CGI programs, and debug code. Paced for self-study, this tutorial offers the source code for all of the projects online. Step-by-step instruction for easy learning. Softcover.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Welcome to Perl: A Beginner's Guide. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Better than some reviews give it credit for, Aug 30 2003
By 
Joe Bonanno (Thousand Oaks, CA) - See all my reviews
Ce commentaire est de: Perl: A Beginner's Guide (Paperback)
I have the seond edition of Learning Perl and find that this book is not only far more accessible, but covers things that are useful for beginners that Learning Perl does not. The DBI for instance.

At the price this title is going for used it is a bargain.

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2.0 out of 5 stars good bad and ugly, Dec 1 2002
By A Customer
Ce commentaire est de: Perl: A Beginner's Guide (Paperback)
good: very simple treatment of the perl language. you can learn to program some relatively simple stuff if you haven't done any programming in 15 years (like me).

bad: the book is ATROCIOUSLY edited. i find at least one significantly confusing typo every few pages. if you look on the bright side, you can use these mistakes to hone your skills on finding scripting errors, but in general, it seems to reflect a lack of care in putting the book together.

ugly: this is for an absolute beginner who's willing to work through all of the typos. you will have to shell out additional $$ to begin to use perl in any productive manner.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Poor Examples, and Full of Typos, Oct 16 2002
By 
hoosac (Morris Plains, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
Ce commentaire est de: Perl: A Beginner's Guide (Paperback)
I am always on the lookout for Perl books from sources other than O'Reilly & Associates. Since Larry Wall works for them, they are The Authorities on the language, no question. But I've often felt that they know the language perhaps too well; they are so familiar with its subtleties that they don't do as good a job of explaining the basics as they might.

I consider myself to be beyond the novice stage in Perl programming, but far from an expert, so I was very interested in what Perl: A Beginner's Guide had to say.

It is a maddening book. I really would like to say something positive about it, but it is so full of typos, and so haphazardly put together, that I just can't.

The slipshod feeling shows right from the beginning. After explaining how to run the traditional "Hello, World" program, the authors explain the chomp() function, which removes a newline character from the end of an input line. We're then given a Note, with a box around it, to clear up a key point:

"Perl also has a function called chomp(), which removes the last character of a string. Unlike chomp(), chomp() removes any character, no matter what it is, whereas chomp() only remove the character if it's a newline character. When you only need to remove a trailing newline character, you should always use chomp(), because it's safer."

Got that?

Sure, you know that they're talking about chop() versus chomp(), and this is only a typo. But how long will it take the beginner who's reading this book to figure that out?

On page 59 the authors introduce Perl's comparison operators, including the = = operator inherited from C, and the source of much confusion among novices and experts alike. Twenty-three pages later we finally get an example of one of these operators, and it's wrong:

$a = 20;
if( $a = 15){
print "a is equal to 15\n";
}
else....

This example, of course, will print "a is equal to 15" until the cows come home. Or until the reader throws the book aside in disgust.

I could go on, but you get the point. The problem is not only that the book is full of small errors like the ones I've cited; the problem is that their presence makes you mistrust everything the book says, even when it's correct.

A more subtle issue, and one that's harder to get a handle on, is the fact that the book's examples are, for the most part, trivial. You get the feeling that the authors, faced with the need to come up with an example to illustrate the feature of the language they were discussing at the moment, just wrote down whatever popped into their heads. The examples illustrate the point, but they don't take on the more important job of helping the reader to begin to think like a Perl programmer.

For example, in the section on regular expressions, there are a series of examples that use this syntax:

if ($result = $string1 =~ /Hello/){

This example is used over and over, and yes, it works. But, since we never make use of $result anywhere else, a Perl programmer would simplify this to:

if ($string1 =~ /Hello/){

Moreover, in the real world, you'd be more likely to see something like:

if (/Hello/){

-- which makes use of the implied $_ variable. Although an awareness and understanding of the many $x variables are key to understanding Perl's often-cryptic syntax, references to them are sprinkled haphazardly throughout the book; nowhere are they laid out in a logical, orderly fashion.

As I said at the beginning, I really would like to like this book. The authors obviously have gone out of their way to try to write a manual that makes Perl approachable for beginners. What they've got here is a good first draft; but it's not ready for publication.

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