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in reply to Re: New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6
in thread New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6

The camel is used on the cover for Programming Perl only. Each O'Reilly title uses a different animal.

That they decided to go with a big-headed, horned, hairy beast with its tail between its legs (that's trying to moon us or be sexy) is either a stroke of genius, sublime wit, or temporary insanity :)

I'll wait until the colophon comes out before trying to figure that one out.

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Re: Re: Re: New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6
by crenz (Priest) on May 22, 2003 at 11:59 UTC

    The camel is used on the cover for Programming Perl only.

    Yes, but Learning Perl uses the Llama (and the Alpaca for Randal's new book), so at least it stays "in the family" :).

Re: Re: Re: New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6
by Anonymous Monk on May 22, 2003 at 16:13 UTC
    The camel is used on the cover for Programming Perl only. Each O'Reilly title uses a different animal.

    I think everyone knows that. The idea that ORA would use a Camel for every title is amusing, though.

Re: Re: Re: New Perl 6 book -- Yes, Perl 6
by allolex (Curate) on Jun 28, 2003 at 07:40 UTC

    Since you asked, this is from the colophon :)

    The animal on the cover of Perl 6 Essentials is an aoudad (ammotragus lervia). Commonly known as Barbary sheep, aoudads originated in the arid mountainous regions of northern Africa and have stout, sturdy bodies, standing 75-100 centimeters at the shoulder and weighing from 30-145 kilograms. The aoudad has a bristly reddish-brown coat and is distinguished by a heavy, fringed mane covering its chest and legs. Both males and females have thick, triangular-shaped horns that curve back in a semicircle. A male aoudad's horns can grow up to 85 centimeters.

    Aoudads are herbivores and are most active at dawn and dusk, avoiding the desert heat of midday. They will drink water if it is available, but can obtain sufficient moisture from dew and vegetation. Aoudads are incredible jumpers, able to clear 6 feet from a standstill. So well suited are they to their surroundings that newborns have the ability to navigate rocky slopes within just hours after birth.

    Despite being endangered in their native environment, aoudads are flourishing in the United States. Introduced to western Texas and southern New Mexico in the 1940s, aoudads are now so populous that it is feared that their presence may threaten the native desert bighorn sheep. Aoudads are considered native game in the desert mountains of their adopted home, where the rugged landscape is dotted with ranches catering to recreational hunters.

    --
    Allolex