in reply to The Gates of Perl are not newbie friendly.
Welcome to the Monastary. I suggest that you buy/borrow Learning Perl, but until then, try these out:
Perl programming and scheduling in the corporate world, as explained by dragonchild:
- Learning Perl as a First (programming) language
- Fundamentals Of Programming -- In 6 Hours
- Perl Object Oriented Meta-Tutorial if you're interested in OOP
- Basic Input and Output
- pattern-matching examples
- Common Regex Gotchas
- Common Beginner Mistakes
- How to RTFM (for a laugh, check out this redefinition of RTFM:)
- Parsing your script's command line
- Minimal Perl for the Impatient (hmm, I should read that one)
- How (Not) To Ask A Question
- PerlMonks for the Absolute Beginner (why not?)
If you put a little effort into finding the right docs, you'll find that almost everything you want to know about programming is available, either here or elsewhere on the 'net, for free. And if you have some money to spend, you can get some more great docs. Put in a little time searching, and you'll love the results.
Perl programming and scheduling in the corporate world, as explained by dragonchild:
"Uhh ... that'll take me three weeks, broken down as follows: 1 day for coding, the rest for meetings to explain why I only need 1 day for coding."
In Section
Seekers of Perl Wisdom