(@INC
^^^
This is where it specifies that it can't find the .so file...
- --Curtis
- --
Curtis Jewell http://curtis.livejournal.com/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://web.missouri.edu/~csjc05/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://new-york.utica.mission.net/
Public Ke
IN failed--compilation aborted at Makefile.PL line 2.
This is weird!!! I get the impression that "root"'s perl is still
executing...
Instead of changing your PATH variable, try specifying where your perl is
on the command line, like so:
$ ~/perl5/perl Makefile.PL
(or wherev
For #2, I'm specifically looking for when it runs GCC to create the .so
file that this module needs. This may indicate that things weren't installed
properly. You may wish to redirect the "make" output (both stdin and
stderr) to a file in order to review it.
- --Curtis
- --
Curtis Je
if you have
more than one of either, or a scalar after them...
Try subroutine($variable, \%hash, \@array);
and pick it up as
sub subroutine {
my($variable, $hashref, $arrayref) = @_;
my %hash = %$hashref;
my @array = @$arrayref;
That should work.
- --
Curtis Jewell http://curtis.
l books and none say the character "<" is
> reserved. "\<" doesn't work either.
>
> Thanks for any help. (Actually, thanks for writing my program for me;
> although I'm trying hard to do it myself.) ;-)
- --
Curtis Jewell http://curtis.l
you can use to easily
> telnet into your server, even if it requires SSH
> (although I've only *read* about the SSH
> functionality).
Didn't see that in Net::Telnet - however, there is a Net::SSH::Perl to do
SSH1 in a "pure-perl" (as opposed to XS) module.
- --
ocal $| = 1;
my $httpdate = time2str('%a, %d %b %Y %T %Z', time, "GMT");
my $URL = "whatever"
# however you pick the URL.
# It must be a fully qualified pathname portion of a URL.
# For example, if one image you wanted to use is
# http://www.yoursite.com/images/1/100.jpg