A tool for Internet-oriented knowledge based systems
SAC '00 Proceedings of the 2000 ACM symposium on Applied computing - Volume 1
Perl: Not Just for Web Programming
IEEE Software
The Information System for Creating and Maintaining the Electronic Archive of Documents
ADVIS '02 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Advances in Information Systems
An Embedded Error Recovery and Debugging Mechanism for Scripting Language Extensions
Proceedings of the General Track: 2002 USENIX Annual Technical Conference
Webquery: a simple web-enabled system for database management
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Automated scientific software scripting with SWIG
Future Generation Computer Systems - Tools for program development and analysis
LIMP: an interpreted programming language for students, professors and programmers
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Specifying performance properties of parallel applications using compound events
On-line monitoring systems and computer tool interoperability
Request v3: A Modular, Extensible Task Tracking Tool
LISA '98 Proceedings of the 12th USENIX conference on System administration
RedAlert: A Scalable System for Application Monitoring
LISA '99 Proceedings of the 13th USENIX conference on System administration
The BAT: a beginner's assembler tutor for the arcane art
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Programming language concepts and Perl
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Technology supports for distributed and collaborative learning over the internet
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
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From the Publisher:Whether your knowledge of Perl is casual or deep, this book will make you a more accomplished programmer. Here you can learn the complex techniques for production-ready Perl programs. This book explains methods for manipulating data and objects that may have looked like magic before. Furthermore, it sets Perl in the context of a larger environment, giving you the background you need for dealing with networks, databases, and GUIs. The discussion of internals helps you program more efficiently and embed Perl within C, or C within Perl. In addition, the book patiently explains all sorts of language details you've always wanted to know more about, such as the use of references, trapping errors through the eval operator, non-blocking I/O, when closures are helpful, and using ties to trigger actions when data is accessed. You will emerge from this book a better hacker, and a proud master of Perl.