* Stevan Little ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [060305 16:53]: > > to the two new perl books "Perl DBI-(Any)-cpan:TIMB" > > and "Perl DBI-(Any)-mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
> Well, to start with, there is no > C6PAN/SixPan/Whatever-it-will-be-called yet, so there is nothing to > pre-register for. On the German Perl Workshop last week, I stirred things up a little with a BoF session about the subject. Amongst others, Andreas and Juerd where present. > Second, Perl 6 is still (at the very least) a year away from a > (mostly) complete implementation, > .... So pre-registration for namespaces in an unfinished language > is a litte premature IMO. So, in your opinion, it is easy to extend CPAN to contain perl6/parrot/ etc? Depends on the targets you set. Perl is especially known for its extended library: it is the main reason we still exist. To make Perl6 a success, we have to take care of the library! Just like new languages (like ruby) and ~features challenged Larry to redesign our favorit language, should CPAN be evaluated against new developments. Can we learn from SVN/SVK? Linux/GIT? Packaging like rpm's, etc? The library world grew much more complex with languages, character-sets, webdav, and super-fast networks at home. We do not only need to host Perl6, but also perl5, pir, pasm, partcl, etc etc languages. Quite a large number of people I spoke last week saw the need for major changes in the general set-up of CPAN. But certainly the current one is there to stay as well: CPAN is great. Maybe we can make it greater. Say Perl6 is still 2 years away, than we need to hurry with new plans for CPAN: when the currently eagerly waiting hurd of Perl programmers jump in, it is too late... > And lastly, I really don't like the idea anyway. It reminds me of the > domain-name squatters of the mid-90s. No, what I suggest is just like how cpan works now. But with a little planning ahead. > Some things may just need to stay the same, namespace intact. Anything > else would IMO further the Perl 5/6 gap that will inevitably exist > because of the depths of the language changes. For me, it feels as a big mistake when our new archiving needs are seen as a simple extra glue to the existing CPAN. If we need something smarter over two years, we have to start designing it NOW, and building it tomorrow! Before this becomes a real discussion about the future of CPAN: this thread started with Yuval asking about having a Perl Wiki. It would be nice to have a place where the community can be build, where the wide variety of projects can be organized which are required for a good and large new library. Were we can store presentations and teaching materials for the new languages, and so on. -- Regards, MarkOv ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Mark Overmeer MSc MARKOV Solutions [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://Mark.Overmeer.net http://solutions.overmeer.net