On Sat, 29 Oct 2011 23:24:10 +0200, Sime Ramov wrote:
> * Shlomi Fish [2011-10-29T19:03+0200]:
>> Since you're not interested in the output of the pkg_add command, you
>> should do:
>>
>> system("pkg_add", $_);
>
> Actually, I am. I want to be able to interface with the program. E.g. if
> there
Hi,
$0.02
Look on cpan for the various proc:: modules. If you're doing something
like a file copy, and need to shell out to do something, consider looking
at :
http://search.cpan.org/~bzajac/Proc-Background-1.10/lib/Proc/Background.pm.
For me, it works when I need to do something on the command l
Hi all,
I would like to perform the following, start X (say 10) number
of threads to perform some operation (ex. Copy command), I would like to
exit or return out of the thread(s) that takes too long ( ex. 30 minutes
). I'm thinking I should spawn an independent thread (a watch thread)
and
At 18:38 + 1/11/11, Phil Dobbin wrote:
I use the /usr/local/ version for everything & leave the other two
to their intended purposes. My question is how do I configure CPAN
to install into /usr/local/?
The way I do it is simply:
$ cd /usr/local/bin; sudo ./cpan
No disrespect to Perlbrew
On 1/11/11 at 21:09, shlo...@shlomifish.org (Shlomi Fish) wrote:
> You can do «/usr/local/bin/perl -MCPAN -e 'shell'» or a different CPAN.pm (or
> CPANPLUS/etc.) command.
Hi.
Yeah, I ended up setting up an alias in my .bash_profile as so:
alias cpan=’sudo /usr/local/bin/perl -MCPAN -e shell’
&
On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 18:38:38 +
Phil Dobbin wrote:
> Hi.
>
> I have three versions of perl on my machine (Macbook Pro running
> 10.6.8.): v.5.12 in /opt/local/ for MacPorts, v.5.10 in
> /usr/bin/ which is the system perl & my developer perl v.5.14 in /usr/local/.
>
> I use the /usr/local/
On 11/1/11 Tue Nov 1, 2011 12:02 PM, "rent0n" scribbled:
> Hi all,
>
> Can somebody please explain what is the difference between:
>
> sub subroutine {
> my $var = @_;
> ...
> return 1;
> }
>
> and:
>
> sub subroutine {
> my ($var) = @_;
> ...
> return 1;
> }
>
> I think it's something rel
On 1/11/11 at 19:42, p...@pjcj.net (Paul Johnson) wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 07:18:06PM +, Phil Dobbin wrote:
[snip]
> > What’s your opinion on hard-pathing to CPAN a la `$
> > /usr/local/bin/perl -MCPAN -e shell’ in order to use the CPAN that’s
> > installed there to install modules i
On Tue, Nov 01, 2011 at 07:18:06PM +, Phil Dobbin wrote:
> From the Googling I did concerning this, I came across perlbrew &
> bootstrapping using local::lib but wondered if there was a simpler
> solution.
Quite.
> What’s your opinion on hard-pathing to CPAN a la `$
> /usr/local/bin/perl -MC
On 11/01/2011 03:02 PM, rent0n wrote:
Hi all,
Can somebody please explain what is the difference between:
sub subroutine {
my $var = @_;
that puts @_ in a scalar context which returns the number of elements in
an array.
...
return 1;
}
and:
sub subroutine {
my ($var) = @_;
...
that puts
On 1/11/11 at 18:45, shawnhco...@gmail.com (Shawn H Corey) wrote:
I think perlbrew can be used to switch between installed Perls.
If so, switch to the one you want and run `cpan`. This will
cause cpan to use the active perl and install the modules in
its @INC directories.
I use perlbrew to i
Hi all,
Can somebody please explain what is the difference between:
sub subroutine {
my $var = @_;
...
return 1;
}
and:
sub subroutine {
my ($var) = @_;
...
return 1;
}
I think it's something related to the context but I'm not completely
sure.
On 11-11-01 02:38 PM, Phil Dobbin wrote:
I use the /usr/local/ version for everything & leave the other two to
their intended purposes. My question is how do I configure CPAN to
install into /usr/local/?
I think perlbrew can be used to switch between installed Perls. If so,
switch to the one y
Hi.
I have three versions of perl on my machine (Macbook Pro running
10.6.8.): v.5.12 in /opt/local/ for MacPorts, v.5.10 in
/usr/bin/ which is the system perl & my developer perl v.5.14 in /usr/local/.
I use the /usr/local/ version for everything & leave the other
two to their intended purp
14 matches
Mail list logo