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State of the Onion 11

chromatic writes "Larry Wall's State of the Onion 11 address is now online. Every year, he describes the state of Perl and its community through metaphor and analogy. This year, Larry explored the history of scripting languages, from their dimly-lit beginnings to their glorious future. Along the way, he also describes several of the design principles invoked in the design of Perl 6. 'When I was a RSTS programmer on a PDP-11, I certainly treated BASIC as a scripting language, at least in terms of rapid prototyping and process control. I'm sure it warped my brain forever. Perl's statement modifiers are straight out of BASIC/PLUS. It even had some cute sigils on the ends of its variables to distinguish string and integer from floating point. But you could do extreme programming. In fact, I had a college buddy I did pair programming with. We took a compiler writing class together and studied all that fancy stuff from the dragon book.'"

5 of 278 comments (clear)

  1. Perl 6: The Language of the Future (... Forever) by joe_n_bloe · · Score: 5, Funny

    Every year Larry talks about what interesting things have been going on with Perl 6. These interesting things never include "release."

  2. In other news... by nycguy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Duke Nukem Forever team announces that they are reimplementing everything in Perl 6.

  3. Re:Yup... and he doesn't apologize for it by Nimey · · Score: 4, Funny

    So it's the computer-language equivalent of English?

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  4. Re:BASIC/PLUS by Suzuran · · Score: 4, Funny

    My high school had a calculator policy of "You may bring any calculator you like to calculator-allowed tests."
    So one day I decided that my calculator was GLAXIA, my PDP-11/44 which ran RSTS/E (V8 or V7, I forget which...)
    I packed the whole thing on a cart; the system (Two BA11s), RA81 disk, and LA-120 teletype, and wheeled it into the classroom.
    The teacher asked me what it was - "It's my calculator." The look on his face was priceless.
    It was loud as hell, but the teacher allowed me to complete the test with it. I forget what I scored.
    Thereafter the calculator policy was changed to read
    "You may bring any calculator you like to calculator-allowed tests, provided it does not dim the lights when powered on."

    Old hardware rocks!

  5. Re:Perl 6: The Language of the Future (... Forever by nuzak · · Score: 4, Funny

    > Thankfully, Perl 6 follows the same principle as previous Perls

    Except for actually existing.

    --
    Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.