reviews/advanced_perl_programming_2e.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<page title="Advanced Perl Programming 2ed" keywords="">
<item>
<p>Author: Simon Cozens</p>
<p>ISBN: <a href="http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/advperl2/index.html">0-596-00456-7</a></p>
<p>Publisher: <a href="http://www.oreilly.com/">O'Reilly</a></p>
<p>Reviewed by: Mark Fowler</p>
</item><item>
<p>Advanced Perl Programming Second Edition should really be considered a
completely separate book from the first edition. A complete rewrite by a
different author covering different topics, this book represents much more
the areas a respected Perl programmer should know about today than the
rather aging previous edition. I'd hasten anyone who still has the
previous edition knocking around to forget any idea they might have had
about 'making do' with the old edition; So different are the two books
that I'm keeping both editions next to each other on my bookshelf.</p>
<p>Despite it's title this edition of the book doesn't contain all you need
to know about Advanced Perl Programming, but rather gives a simple
introduction to several of the advanced topics that aren't covered by
Programming Perl and it's ilk. Thankfully this scattershot of random
topics prevents the book becoming bogged down in details and makes the
subject matter accessible enough, imparting just enough knowledge to remain
useful without becoming offputting.</p>
<p>I'd best describe this book as a quick way of finding out what you should
be aware of and bootstrapping the process about learning about each of
the topics. While there's no way that I could even hope to describe any
of the chapters in the book as comprehensive, I'd say that they explain
just enough that they give an idea of what you're trying to learn about
without needlessly repeating the kind of information that's best to obtain
directly from the associated module documentation and manual pages.</p>
<p>In addition to briefly covering some of the advanced topics, in some cases
this book contains the best "dead tree" explanations of some of the more
complicated aspects of Perl yet to be published. For example, the Unicode
section in Programming Perl should probably be ignored in favour of the
much more comprehensive chapter in this book that properly discusses
modern Unicode handling as is used in Perl 5.8.</p>
<p>In conclusion, I highly recommend this book for any Perl Programmer who
wants to move beyond the basics of using Perl to do simple tasks and wants
to learn about the way Perl is programmed today.</p>
</item>
</page>
reviews/advanced_perl_programming_2e.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<page title="Advanced Perl Programming 2ed" keywords="">
<item>
<p>Author: Simon Cozens</p>
<p>ISBN: <a href="http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/advperl2/index.html">0-596-00456-7</a></p>
<p>Publisher: <a href="http://www.oreilly.com/">O'Reilly</a></p>
<p>Reviewed by: Mark Fowler</p>
</item><item>
<p>Advanced Perl Programming Second Edition should really be considered a
completely separate book from the first edition. A complete rewrite by a
different author covering different topics, this book represents much more
the areas a respected Perl programmer should know about today than the
rather aging previous edition. I'd hasten anyone who still has the
previous edition knocking around to forget any idea they might have had
about 'making do' with the old edition; So different are the two books
that I'm keeping both editions next to each other on my bookshelf.</p>
<p>Despite it's title this edition of the book doesn't contain all you need
to know about Advanced Perl Programming, but rather gives a simple
introduction to several of the advanced topics that aren't covered by
Programming Perl and it's ilk. Thankfully this scattershot of random
topics prevents the book becoming bogged down in details and makes the
subject matter accessible enough, imparting just enough knowledge to remain
useful without becoming offputting.</p>
<p>I'd best describe this book as a quick way of finding out what you should
be aware of and bootstrapping the process about learning about each of
the topics. While there's no way that I could even hope to describe any
of the chapters in the book as comprehensive, I'd say that they explain
just enough that they give an idea of what you're trying to learn about
without needlessly repeating the kind of information that's best to obtain
directly from the associated module documentation and manual pages.</p>
<p>In addition to briefly covering some of the advanced topics, in some cases
this book contains the best "dead tree" explanations of some of the more
complicated aspects of Perl yet to be published. For example, the Unicode
section in Programming Perl should probably be ignored in favour of the
much more comprehensive chapter in this book that properly discusses
modern Unicode handling as is used in Perl 5.8.</p>
<p>In conclusion, I highly recommend this book for any Perl Programmer who
wants to move beyond the basics of using Perl to do simple tasks and wants
to learn about the way Perl is programmed today.</p>
</item>
</page>