brian d foy
brian d foy | |
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Born | United States |
Occupation(s) | Author, computer programmer |
brian d foy [
PerlPowerTools
In 2014 he revitalized the PerlPowerTools AKA PPT project.[5] In February 1999, Tom Christiansen announced the PerlPowerTools project to provide a unified BSD toolbox, i.e. a reimplementation of the classic Unix command set in pure Perl. Perl is the same (mostly) everywhere you go and the same programs could run the same everywhere instead of being reimplemented for each platform.
Bibliography
- ISBN 0-596-10105-8(fourth edition, 2005)
- Learning Perl, ISBN 978-0-596-52010-6(fifth edition, 2008)
- Learning Perl, ISBN 978-1-44930-358-7(sixth edition, 2011)
- Learning Perl, ISBN 978-1-49195-432-4(seventh edition, 2016)
- Learning Perl, ISBN 978-1-49209-495-1(eighth edition, 2021)
- Student Workbook for Learning Perl, ISBN 0-596-00996-8(2005)
- Learning Perl Student Workbook, ISBN 1-4493-2806-7(second edition, 2012)
- ISBN 0-596-10206-2(2006)
- Intermediate Perl, ISBN 978-1-4493-9309-0(second edition, 2012)
- Mastering Perl, ISBN 978-0-596-52724-2(2007)
- Mastering Perl, ISBN 978-1-44939-311-3(second edition, 2014)
- Effective Perl Programming: Ways to Write Better, More Idiomatic Perl, ISBN 978-0-321-49694-2(second edition, 2010)
- ISBN 0-596-00492-3(fourth edition, 2011)
- Learning Perl 6, ISBN 1-49197-768-X(2018)
References
- ^ d foy, brian. "brian d foy style guide". www252.pair.com/comdog. Retrieved 15 April 2008.
- ^ "White Camel Awards: 2004 recipients". Retrieved 11 August 2010.
- ^ "brian d foy". Retrieved 18 January 2011.
- ^ chromatic (2005). "People Behind Perl: brian d foy". perl.com. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
- ^ "PerlPowerTools". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
External links