2004 Perl Advent Calendar Begins 12
JeffMagnus writes "In another sign of the rapid approach of Christmas, Mark Fowler has posted the first entry in his 2004 Perl Advent Calendar. Each day until December 25, Mark will post a review of some Perl module he finds useful. This marks the fifth year for this Perl Christmastime tradition."
Nice idea (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nice idea (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Nice idea (Score:3, Informative)
DateTime is more than just useful -- it's *essential*. I have no idea why it
isn't in the core distribution, but it's on my list of things that have to be
installed on any new computer before it's ready for use. Seriously, when was
the last time you wrote a program of any significant size that *didn't* have
to deal with dates and times? I use DateTime in *most* of my programs. (No,
don't talk to me about localtime and gmtime; thos
Re:Nice idea (Score:2)
BTW, I was tweeking my christmas webcam [komar.org] code today and I was actually surprised that I do NOT use DateTime there ... but I don't do much time manipulation and I intentionally tried to minimize modules inclusion for performance reasons ... but rest assured I use it in a lotta other code!
Re:Nice idea (Score:3, Insightful)
I will be watching this years closely for any useful tidbits.
Don't miss last year's 19th! (Score:4, Interesting)
Then, you can go explore the rest of the Acme namespace [cpan.org].
PHP (Score:1)
Real dates for advent (Score:1)
Advent is not dec 1 - 25.
It changes every year always starting on a sunday and ending on christmas eve.
this year it started on the 28 of December.
See complete calendar at http://www.cresourcei.org/cydatesA.html
Not to take away form the program but calling it an advent calendar seems a bit off. Oh well the co-opting of a taken over stolen holiday must continue.
Re:Real dates for advent (Score:2)
Dec 28 to Dec 24? Advent travels backward through time this year? That will be a great trick. Maybe we'll be able to track it using Time::Travel [cpan.org] or Time::Warp [cpan.org].