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c8b7257 | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 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deployments from the simple deployments are roku to complex [49.84 --> 55.34] deployment pipelines for large infrastructures they can all be set up with ease they even integrate [55.34 --> 60.54] with github or bitbucket you can get started today with their free plan setup takes just three minutes [60.54 --> 67.06] make sure you use the code the changelog podcast to get a 20 discount for three months on any plane you [67.06 --> 73.68] choose head to code ship.io slash the changelog and tell them the changelog sent you and now on to the [73.68 --> 87.38] show everybody we're back and today we're joined by curtis ovid uh ovid poe actually he's got a cool [87.38 --> 92.00] middle name there's not a real middle name maybe at some point curtis you can mention how you got that [92.00 --> 98.58] name it's your internet handle right yes it is i'm here jared's here we're all here with curtis and [98.58 --> 105.34] we're going to talk about pearl so we're excited what's uh what's ovid ovid um a long time ago when [105.34 --> 111.06] i switched from mainframe development and getting into pearl uh i decided to sign up for the website [111.06 --> 117.30] called pearl monks and i happen to tremendously enjoy poetry and when i had to pick a username [117.30 --> 122.90] my two top favorite poets were uh an 18th 19th century scottish poet named john davidson [122.90 --> 129.82] or the roman poet ovid and john davidson sounded like a very stupid username so i picked the username [129.82 --> 136.86] ovid and it just stuck with me for the years i like ovid i wish i had that name and i could be i [136.86 --> 141.28] could be a ba with with ovid oh his poetry is phenomenal highly recommended particularly [141.28 --> 148.16] translations by peter green so uh that's that's obviously language dependent there but um let's [148.16 --> 155.90] give a shout out to to uh robert norris uh he's rob n r-o-b-n on github he actually suggested this [155.90 --> 160.22] show via our ping repo so if you don't know it and you're a listener out there we have a weekly email [160.22 --> 166.80] we ship we have a featured section in there for pings we get on the ping repo drop an issue in there [166.80 --> 172.58] just like robert norris did or rob n on github did uh to suggest us to talk to curtis and talk about [172.58 --> 178.14] pearl and kind of bring we've never actually had a pearl specific show on this uh on the podcast [178.14 --> 183.90] so we're excited about that but uh every week we feature how many repos we feature jared on in [183.90 --> 191.30] weekly uh three three okay so we feature three repos in our weekly email via ping so if you've got [191.30 --> 195.76] some awesome repos out there you need some extra traction on drop them in there they might show up [195.76 --> 199.82] on the podcast they might show up in the email they might show up on the blog you just never know [199.82 --> 204.90] we might even tweet it out so uh with that said let's let's drop into to this conversation with [204.90 --> 211.06] curtis curtis you know jared jared and i you know jared back in college you did some pearl work [211.06 --> 217.32] i own a few pearls um we probably have a pretty diverse listenership to this uh to this podcast [217.32 --> 222.36] that is going to be really adept to programming but maybe not that big of a fan to pearl so what [222.36 --> 229.38] do you say to those people who are not huge fans of pearl um i actually don't say anything to them i'm i [229.38 --> 235.84] understand that not everyone is going to be able to get into every language and pearl during the late [235.84 --> 243.38] 1990s early 2000s was you know rightfully called the duct tape of the internet and as the market has [243.38 --> 250.02] grown and there was such a low barrier to entry we have a lot of competitors come in and for any [250.02 --> 255.68] healthy market of course it's going to shrink our market share and so for a lot of people who didn't [255.68 --> 261.04] care for the pearl syntax um they were happy to turn away from it so it's kind of sad because it's [261.04 --> 265.60] a fabulous language and we shouldn't let the punctuation characters in there turn people away [265.60 --> 271.96] from it but nonetheless you know people have their opinions and just as i understand that i also like [271.96 --> 277.36] other diverse languages i i enjoy python i enjoy ruby i i like prologue i think it's fascinating [277.36 --> 282.76] uh but i understand not everyone likes everything uh lisp i think is phenomenal language but [282.76 --> 287.96] i don't care to program it just because i just find it so frustrating and ugly when i play around [287.96 --> 293.08] with it no no offense to lisp programmers out there so i i don't really stress about it much i understand [293.08 --> 299.26] that it's not everyone's cup of tea so you've been doing pearl a long time you've written a book on [299.26 --> 305.32] pearl you have a consulting company that consults on pearl uh what is it about the language that you fell [305.32 --> 314.08] in love with it was an accident um in i think it was 1999 i was a mainframe programmer and i was [314.08 --> 321.72] working i was mostly doing cobalt development and one of cobalt's worst strengths is worst abilities is [321.72 --> 327.00] dealing with freeform text and that's pretty much all the web is incidentally which is why cobalt even [327.00 --> 331.00] though it's tried to it's never broken up the web and there was i was working on a program to [331.00 --> 338.60] convert nt csv files into the mainframe fixed width format that cobalt is really comfortable with [338.60 --> 343.96] and it was about 150 lines of code and there was a bug and someone didn't understand something called [343.96 --> 349.66] the unstring function something we would call split in many modern languages which splits a string on a [349.66 --> 355.34] character and i fixed it i got it down to i think like 80 lines of code and this unix sysadmin kept [355.34 --> 361.46] telling me you got to check out pearl so i checked it out and i got this 80 line cobalt function down [361.46 --> 367.12] to about 10 lines of pearl and that was with error checking and it was actually fairly readable and i [367.12 --> 371.96] was thinking my goodness what the heck am i doing and when he eventually left to form his own company [371.96 --> 378.32] he said come along i know you can do this and i haven't looked back though the ironic thing is i enjoy [378.32 --> 384.96] a lot of other programming languages i program in c assembler variants of basic java ruby python [384.96 --> 392.18] but i joined pearl right at the time of the dot-com collapse so i stuck around with pearl for so long [392.18 --> 397.98] that after the economy rebounded i found myself in a situation where people would see so much pearl [397.98 --> 402.80] on my cv either they didn't want to offer me a position or they would offer me a junior programmer [402.80 --> 408.54] salary so i wound up sticking with pearl and i've been specializing in it for about 15 years now [408.54 --> 414.90] it seems fitting that the the thing that brought you to pearl it seems to be its its best trait which [414.90 --> 420.56] is and what it was designed for right isn't it all about text extraction and manipulation that's [420.56 --> 427.12] initially what was going on larry wall uh the creator of pearl uh he originally released it in 1987 [427.12 --> 434.70] and he was trying to handle a lot of problems that said and awk and other tools were supposed to be [434.70 --> 440.28] doing but he wanted to do it in one tool to make it very easy i believe for reporting for nasa as i [440.28 --> 447.02] recall and then he eventually released pearl uh open source to the community pearl 1 in 87 and it just [447.02 --> 454.30] took off from there it was just so phenomenally easy to hack and pearl i mean today i often find myself [454.30 --> 458.14] writing quick bash scripts and as soon as they start to get complicated i say okay forget about [458.14 --> 463.86] this and i switch over to pearl because it makes things so easy but at the same time i also specialize [463.86 --> 470.72] in extremely large scale uh websites you know database driven uh that use pearl almost exclusively [470.72 --> 476.26] as the back end so it's everything from the really tall blue really small blue things that we have [476.26 --> 480.96] to the very large scale websites some of the largest e-commerce platforms in the world are driven [480.96 --> 487.76] with pearl and it's just amazing how easy it is to shift back and forth like in java i'm not going [487.76 --> 493.66] to use java to hack out a small uh small utility for gluing things together it just wouldn't make any [493.66 --> 499.30] sense at the same time uh tickle might be great for you know a lot of smaller tools but a lot of people [499.30 --> 505.22] complain it doesn't scale as well though again no offense to the tickle community um so it's it just [505.22 --> 510.92] really feels fills a sweet spot for me of being able to solve virtually all of what i tend to do [510.92 --> 518.58] on a daily basis one of the uh the biggest pearl advocates and fans that i know on the podcast scene [518.58 --> 523.94] is john saracusa who um writes pearl you know professionally to this day and loves the language [523.94 --> 528.74] and one of the things that he says that's interesting and maybe you can tell me if this uh resonates with [528.74 --> 535.82] you is that pearl is really kind of a formalization of the unix way and kind of uh taking those ideas [535.82 --> 541.00] of those small tools and those command line tools and wrapping them in kind of a nicer uh language [541.00 --> 546.62] is that does that resonate with you or yes it does and i'm actually going to go back to cobalt for just [546.62 --> 550.84] a moment if you don't mind there's a reason for that so one of the things fascinating about cobalt [550.84 --> 557.22] what made cobalt so powerful and why it stuck along stuck around for so long is because cobalt's not very [557.22 --> 561.80] good it's not very powerful it's hard to write big systems in cobalt so what you do is you write [561.80 --> 566.26] a small cobalt utility which maybe reads some records from an isam database and stores them [566.26 --> 572.40] in the file but you have jcl job controlling which kind of it's tough to describe it doesn't really [572.40 --> 576.72] have a good analogy today but jcl would have different steps so you call a step which would [576.72 --> 581.62] read that a cobalt program which read the data saved to a file you call another step which would sort [581.62 --> 586.76] that file and then the next step might load another program which would read that file [586.76 --> 592.96] add some more data in save it and then you call another one which would take that saved file [592.96 --> 598.64] pass it on to another system basically it was a unix pipeline and that's part of what made cobalt [598.64 --> 603.88] so incredibly powerful because it wasn't powerful so people built a lot of small decoupled tools [603.88 --> 610.66] and kind of piped them together with jcl so that worked out very well for me when i was transitioning [610.66 --> 616.24] into pearl initially and getting used to the unix model because it was used to the way my mind [616.24 --> 623.36] already worked build small tools pipe them together so that's part of the reason why yes i write a lot [623.36 --> 628.72] of bash i write a lot of small bash utilities to get stuff done but anytime it starts to become [628.72 --> 634.10] painful and bash and anyone who's done enough bash scripting knows what i mean i just switch to pearl [634.10 --> 639.80] and i can do the same thing and it winds up being it's not quite as simple as bash but once you get [639.80 --> 644.06] to the stuff that bash is you know a little bit weaker on or maybe my bash knowledge isn't as good [644.06 --> 649.88] in pearl just makes it so easy to glue all these different tools together to shell out to some of [649.88 --> 655.60] their program fetch its results uh you know fork off multiple processes run a whole bunch of stuff [655.60 --> 661.80] aggregate them together and push it out there it's just it's lovely it's simple and you know from [661.80 --> 667.12] scaling down to that small scale the really tiny things you do up to the big large scale systems [667.12 --> 673.66] it's just it's always amazed me how seamlessly it tends to do that let's talk about some of those [673.66 --> 678.50] the large scale systems you speak of um do you know any off the top of your head that are like [678.50 --> 682.24] you know well-known sites that people may not realize are actually powered by pearl in the back [682.24 --> 686.08] end uh depends upon what other people would think of as a well-known site so i live in europe [686.08 --> 694.18] and one of the well-known sites over here is booking.com uh until the ipo of alibaba they were the third [694.18 --> 699.98] largest e-commerce site in the world after amazon and ebay i mean they're huge they're not as well [699.98 --> 704.78] known in the united states but basically they're an online hotel reservation system and they're massive [704.78 --> 710.44] and yet almost the entire back end is written in pearl and i remember when i was working for them [710.44 --> 716.56] one of my first days there i was walking by this guy and he was hacking on some java and i was surprised [716.56 --> 721.24] and i said what are you doing java programming what do we do with java here and he said well we don't [721.24 --> 725.44] we're taking all of our java programs and we're converting them to pearl just because it's easier [725.44 --> 731.58] to work with which i found rather ironic because sometimes you hear about it going the other way [731.58 --> 735.24] around people are converting pearl some of the language and here they're converting from some of [735.24 --> 739.82] their language into pearl and it's something very common for them but they just found pearl so easy to [739.82 --> 747.18] work with so that's possibly the biggest uh company i know of i work for the bbc also um world's largest [747.18 --> 753.98] broadcaster they had 26 000 uh people when i was there and i was working on the central metadata [753.98 --> 759.50] repository which basically that was information about you know what their schedules were what [759.50 --> 765.34] programs were on telly and i found it rather ironic that me an american who didn't watch tv was telling [765.34 --> 771.10] the british people what tv they were going to watch and all of that was managed through their pip system [771.10 --> 779.46] all written entirely in pearl and just many many companies like that crowd tilt now known as tilt.com [779.46 --> 786.26] which is a popular crowdsourcing system is written entirely in pearl there's actually an mmorpg called [786.26 --> 792.74] lacuna expanse which has been written in pearl lots of large-scale systems some are well-known some are less [792.74 --> 798.98] well so there's a lot of it out there um yes man it's been a long around a long time there's a lot of it [798.98 --> 803.92] out there it has a lot of virtues what is it about it it seems like it's behind it seems like pearl's [803.92 --> 810.24] behind the scenes is it just bad marketing or um is it just communities that you know don't necessarily [810.24 --> 817.08] overlap uh you know we keep our our thumb on open source and you know we have to go out of our way to [817.08 --> 821.52] find pearl open source even though it has been from the very beginning so is it what is it about pearl [821.52 --> 828.82] the community is it just small or is this just not vocal um why it's not better known in the [828.82 --> 836.72] greater open source community at one time it was obviously late 1990s early 2000 as i mentioned [836.72 --> 842.48] pearl was known as the duct tape of the internet because it was virtually everything that you wanted [842.48 --> 846.72] to know on the web you know if it wasn't written directly in pearl pearl was supporting behind the [846.72 --> 851.50] scenes and that's still often surprisingly true today i work for a number of different companies [851.50 --> 856.04] they call me in for all sorts of consulting things and i'm finding pearl all over the place but [856.04 --> 864.56] i think part of what happened was uh back around uh around 2000 2001 there was kind of a malaise in [864.56 --> 870.22] the pearl community um internally they were still trying to work out some differences um some folks [870.22 --> 875.50] were frustrated and there was a famous incident when john orwatt threw a mug at the wall shattered it [875.50 --> 881.18] and said we've got to do something different and then the pearl 6 project was born and there was a [881.18 --> 885.78] misunderstanding from the beginning it was decided that pearl 6 would be the successor to pearl [885.78 --> 891.14] but then it was quickly realized that it couldn't be the successor to pearl and said it would be a [891.14 --> 896.42] sister language just as you have you know c sharp is a sister language to java c plus plus is kind of a [896.42 --> 904.10] sister language to pearl pearl 6 is a sister language to pearl 5 and a lot of people simply see pearl 5 and [904.10 --> 910.10] they don't realize that we have major releases um every year or so um new features powerful features [910.10 --> 916.14] being introduced all the time but people just keep seeing pearl 6 and they're not aware that you know [916.14 --> 921.44] development's still continuing on pearl 6 that pearl 5 is still tremendous progressing at a tremendous [921.44 --> 927.64] pace and internally i actually was doing a lot of work with marketing with pearl and i discovered a [927.64 --> 932.76] tremendous amount of hostility from the pearl community for marketing itself um they were just happy [932.76 --> 939.46] to sit back and get stuff done and that kind of caused a problem so people outside think that [939.46 --> 945.06] pearl 6 is a successor and therefore pearl 5 isn't going anywhere when that's absolutely not true we're [945.06 --> 951.38] on pearl 520 right now pearl 522 um you know it's going to be out fairly soon new features being added [951.38 --> 958.90] all the time um powerful features and it's a great language but we don't do a great job of talking about [958.90 --> 964.46] outside of the community it sounds like some misinformation there sort of stouts you a little bit because [964.46 --> 970.42] you want to you obviously want to progress but you don't want to stop the progression and and be like [970.42 --> 977.10] that pearl 5 is not going anywhere can you talk a bit about beyond that the the health aspects i guess of [977.10 --> 984.34] of of 5 versus 6 or where that's you know what some of the biggest issues are around this 5 versus 6 transition [984.34 --> 990.28] well they're entirely separate languages that needs to be understood first of all as i mentioned [990.28 --> 996.62] they're sister languages like c shark or java c plus plus two so it's a right turn to lisp yes um [996.62 --> 1002.72] there is some work being done to make pearl 5 run inside of pearl 6 but it needs to be understood that [1002.72 --> 1008.02] they're not the same language so because we haven't done a great job of communicating that outside and [1008.02 --> 1014.22] because a lot of people just see that pearl 5 was released um that was actually back in 1994 [1014.22 --> 1021.46] that pearl 5 was released uh that was 20 years ago so people aren't aware that pearl 5 20 is not the [1021.46 --> 1031.16] same language as pearl 5 pearl 5 code will generally run with a lot of warnings in 5 20 but 5 20 and the [1031.16 --> 1035.78] supporting libraries that are available for it such as moose probably the most advanced object-oriented [1035.78 --> 1040.96] system you're going to find in any dynamic language today and possibly more advanced than most static [1040.96 --> 1047.00] languages i would say fan fabulous tool i i miss that when i program in anything else there are such [1047.00 --> 1052.12] wonderful things available for pearl 5 but people outside the community aren't aware of that i would [1052.12 --> 1057.04] like to see the pearl community we've done a great job over the past few years of internally getting our [1057.04 --> 1062.10] act together healing you know pushing things forward after that malaise of people internally not [1062.10 --> 1068.24] understanding the pearl 5 pearl 6 split um but it would be it would be great if we can communicate [1068.24 --> 1074.54] that better outside because if people outside of pearl aren't aware of how powerful it is the powerful [1074.54 --> 1079.62] web frameworks orms and other tools that we have uh you know we drive a lot of what's called the bio [1079.62 --> 1083.58] pearl movement so there's a lot of biological work the research being done with pearl if people [1083.58 --> 1090.06] outside aren't aware of that it's harder for them to make the decision to choose that let's pause the show [1090.06 --> 1094.62] for just a minute give a shout out to a sponsor rack space has been helping us out they love open [1094.62 --> 1100.56] source we love open source uh we've been working with rack space for the past year and uh one of the [1100.56 --> 1104.52] things they keep telling me is how much they love open source and that's why they keep sponsoring the [1104.52 --> 1109.52] show and making sure that you know how much they care about it and that's also why they're giving you [1109.52 --> 1116.66] and everyone else who wants it 50 a month in credit for 12 months that's right 50 a month in credit [1116.66 --> 1121.92] for 12 months to explore their open cloud all you got to do is create a developer plus account to get [1121.92 --> 1128.26] started go to the changelaw.com slash rack space to get started you get dev to dev support so if you [1128.26 --> 1133.88] got complex questions you can talk directly to their developers about their sdks and their apis [1133.88 --> 1140.08] they have various services included like monitoring dns auto scaling orchestration private networking the [1140.08 --> 1146.24] list goes on there is no usage limits you can use your services as much as you want and you're only [1146.24 --> 1152.80] billed for usage beyond 50 a month again they're giving away 50 a month in credit for 12 months [1152.80 --> 1159.20] go to the changelaw.com slash rack space to get started and now back to the show yeah something [1159.20 --> 1162.74] we have in our notes here too it's i'm going to quote this back to you because this is what you [1162.74 --> 1168.12] said you said the pearl community and you've said this too here in the show just not as succinctly as [1168.12 --> 1172.80] this um you said the pearl community has been stunningly bad at marketing in this area meaning [1172.80 --> 1179.82] um you know this divide between pearl 5 and pearl 6 and just in general what pearls is going to do [1179.82 --> 1184.48] today and what it's doing today and jared i think that's something maybe we can even possibly help out [1184.48 --> 1189.96] with like you know curtis you mentioned in the bio information you know different areas where pearl [1189.96 --> 1194.80] is doing some cool stuff i think it's neat how the changelaw can kind of step in and have curtis on the [1194.80 --> 1200.50] show and and talk to you know what probably is we have a large ruby audience a large javascript [1200.50 --> 1206.30] audience um to to some people who don't often look at pearl and say oh that's that's neat we should [1206.30 --> 1213.80] try that out but maybe there's a a space here where there's some interest to peek up how great is the [1213.80 --> 1220.66] divide between the two as far as you know sister languages are they syntactically very similar [1220.66 --> 1227.92] or they have huge differences um was pearl 6 was just a huge undertaking uh is it used in production [1227.92 --> 1232.80] i'm just having tons of questions pour out of me here uh pick ovid pick any of those and just run [1232.80 --> 1239.72] with it because i got so many questions now so if you were to look at maybe an interesting example [1239.72 --> 1245.92] would be there are many people who criticize pearl they're unhappy with it people who don't know pearl [1245.92 --> 1250.52] they look at it and they just see a bunch of sigils of punctuation characters all over [1250.52 --> 1256.26] place many of these people could look at pearl and php and not tell you which is which they're not [1256.26 --> 1260.40] going to say anything about php they might have different complaints about php about you know how [1260.40 --> 1265.84] it's kind of ad hoc you know unclear interfaces but for the uninitiated you won't see a difference [1265.84 --> 1270.80] and yet many people will turn to php over pearl simply because it's just ubiquitous on web servers [1270.80 --> 1277.20] and it's so quick and easy to get things started with php uh pearl is extremely powerful um i think in [1277.20 --> 1282.08] many respects i i would definitely prefer pearl over php not just because i know it so well but [1282.08 --> 1285.02] there's some benefits to some of the things it does i'm not going to get into it i don't want to [1285.02 --> 1290.08] fight between languages php is a great thing because it does other stuff well but if you can't tell the [1290.08 --> 1296.74] difference from the outside then if you're in the inside you can easily tell the difference for pro 5 and [1296.74 --> 1301.50] pro 6 from the outside it's a little bit harder to tell the difference until you start getting into [1301.50 --> 1305.86] some of the more advanced features from the inside you're going to see huge differences so they're [1305.86 --> 1310.92] definitely sister languages so you would look at pearl 5 code and there's a lot of pearl 5 code [1310.92 --> 1316.74] which if it's written carefully will run the same under pearl 6 but the differences quickly diverge in [1316.74 --> 1322.56] the cleaner syntax of pearl 6 something we call invariant sigils which really solves a lot of the [1322.56 --> 1330.02] problems that new developers in pearl 5 had a lot of the things that are add-ons to pearl 5 today [1330.02 --> 1335.74] such as meta programming roles which is probably the greatest advancement object-oriented [1335.74 --> 1341.18] programming since simula 67 almost 50 years ago that's going to be baked into the language so many [1341.18 --> 1348.16] powerful things about it which either don't exist directly in pearl 5 or would be very hard to implement [1348.16 --> 1354.04] tell us about that over this roles thing okay roles this comes from smallpox style traits [1354.04 --> 1360.50] and there was a paper called um a brief introduction to traits i believe is the name and it was an [1360.50 --> 1367.06] introduction to solving a long-standing problem we had with uh object-oriented programming so in 1967 [1367.06 --> 1373.48] simula 67 was released and that had classes inheritance polymorphism uh encapsulation and people generally [1373.48 --> 1381.16] agreed about all of that except for inheritance inheritance was such a problem so many languages allow [1381.16 --> 1388.36] multiple inheritance such as c++ and others but you're often warned not to actually use it other languages such as [1388.36 --> 1395.66] java ruby and others say okay multiple inheritance is such a problem we're not going to allow that at [1395.66 --> 1400.46] all but here's the alternative and they actually encourage the alternative the problem is the [1400.46 --> 1407.32] alternatives such as mixins interfaces yep they have so many built-in problems themselves that they [1407.32 --> 1412.66] didn't actually solve the underlying problem so the traits researchers we call them roles in pearl because [1412.66 --> 1418.32] traits is actually a term for a different thing what the traits researchers did is they were [1418.32 --> 1422.66] funded to investigate the problem come up with solution and what they discovered was classes actually [1422.66 --> 1429.60] have two roles as an agent of responsibility your employee class as your system grows has to take [1429.60 --> 1436.54] on more and more and more behavior but if you're going to inherit from your employee class then it's an [1436.54 --> 1441.54] agent of code reuse and quite often for code reuse we don't want all that behavior we just want little [1441.54 --> 1446.72] specific bits and pieces and in fact there's a language called beta which was going to implement [1446.72 --> 1451.16] multiple inheritance but when they researched it they found out that almost everyone using multiple [1451.16 --> 1455.48] inheritance wasn't for creating more specialized classes it was just to pull out bits and pieces of [1455.48 --> 1461.04] parent classes so the reality is for code reuse you actually want smaller code because you just want to pick [1461.04 --> 1466.06] out the bits and pieces you need but for class responsibility you need all of that so classes actually serve [1466.06 --> 1473.40] to do a role reuse and responsibility and the problem we've had with inheritance and the solutions such as [1473.40 --> 1481.60] interfaces and mixins has been you need to decouple those so roles has decoupled them entirely and so classes are [1481.60 --> 1486.48] agents of responsibility so an employee might have an employee number but does an employee know how to [1486.48 --> 1494.88] serialize itself to xml or json no it doesn't this is a bit of behavior which could be shared amongst classes [1494.88 --> 1501.06] which are not necessarily related by inheritance so ruby mixins which actually came from a variant of [1501.06 --> 1508.90] lisp called flavors ruby mixins actually properly separate behavior from responsibility but unfortunately [1508.90 --> 1515.80] they implemented it via single inheritance so if you mix in a couple of modules into your ruby code and [1515.80 --> 1521.36] then you call ancestors you'll find that it's implemented as a single inheritance tree and then you wind up with [1521.36 --> 1526.90] strange bugs so in if you have duplicate methods in multiply inherited classes the first class you [1526.90 --> 1535.06] inherit from generally wins in ruby the last mixin that you've mixed in wins with roles it's completely [1535.06 --> 1540.10] different it says oh i'm sorry you have duplicate methods they have the same name it's going to fail [1540.10 --> 1544.74] at composition time close enough to the pile time most people won't notice the difference it'll fail [1544.74 --> 1549.58] composition time says i don't know which of these methods you need so you specifically say i want this method [1549.58 --> 1556.76] from this role i want this method from that role and you don't have any of those composition issues [1556.76 --> 1561.90] that you have with multiple inheritance or mixins or some of the other solutions which are out there [1561.90 --> 1567.68] there's a lot more i can say about them but this is one of the finest things about roles it cleanly [1567.68 --> 1573.36] separates class responsibility from code reuse and more and more developers are finding out that you can [1573.36 --> 1579.12] eliminate inheritance entirely and build an entire large-scale object-oriented system just by [1579.12 --> 1584.16] composing different roles and saying i want this behavior that behavior the other behavior and you [1584.16 --> 1588.52] get composition safety because you don't have to worry about method conflicts anymore you don't have [1588.52 --> 1592.56] to worry about accidentally inheriting a method that you didn't realize that you were inheriting [1592.56 --> 1599.64] and it makes things so much simpler it sounds like a pretty big win so is that available in pearl 6 today [1599.64 --> 1604.80] it's available in pearl 6 today it's available in pearl 5 via something called moose roles there's some [1604.80 --> 1610.14] other role modules out there i have one myself which is actually goes back to the original research [1610.14 --> 1617.46] on this there's some guarantees that roles actually provide such as being commutative and associative [1617.46 --> 1622.84] basically mathematical guarantees to get around some of the issues that you had with inheritance and [1622.84 --> 1630.90] mixins and different systems meet those guarantees in different ways but it's available out there but many [1630.90 --> 1635.30] other languages have this i know there's been some experiment with java to do this there's been [1635.30 --> 1642.30] some experiments with python to do this i'm pretty sure it's available in ruby javascript has something [1642.30 --> 1647.36] i believe called juice which i had heard about i don't know how far along that is which also [1647.36 --> 1654.20] makes roles available so there's a wide variety of languages which have adopted it but you know how much [1654.20 --> 1658.12] people are actually using it it's hard to say but the pearl community has bought into it wholesale [1658.12 --> 1663.00] because it tremendously simplifies your code and makes it much easier to understand [1663.00 --> 1670.10] pearl 6 sounds very it sounds very experimental and research oriented is it run by the same group [1670.10 --> 1678.12] of folks that are doing the pearl 5 stuff or are they also diverged um yes and no does that help [1678.12 --> 1685.94] uh nope please explain i'm glad i can clarify that so lary wall the founder of pearl um has shifted [1685.94 --> 1692.38] focus from pearl 5 to pearl 6 and many people now call pearl 6 rakudo just to distinguish it from [1692.38 --> 1700.58] pearl 5 would you say rakuda rakudo r-a-k-u-d-o interesting earlier on i was thinking man maybe it just [1700.58 --> 1706.34] needs a separate word like a separate term altogether yes and i would like to see that term adopted a [1706.34 --> 1712.30] little bit more widely but yeah there's there's a lot of background to that um and pearl 6 the name's [1712.30 --> 1717.20] been around for so long that they've stuck with it right so there's that marketing thing about you [1717.20 --> 1723.42] know don't shift your name because you'll lose people so possibly that's some of it yeah anyways [1723.42 --> 1729.76] you were saying so larry wall uh has shifted his focus from pearl 5 to pearl 6 and has been pushing [1729.76 --> 1736.84] it forward and it's just making tremendous strides damian conway uh he wrote uh pearl best practices and [1736.84 --> 1740.68] quite a number of other excellent books uh involving pearl including object-oriented pearl [1740.68 --> 1747.20] and he has also been doing a huge amount of work with this but many people such as uh patrick michaud [1747.20 --> 1753.74] who was heavily involved with php and others carl msak many others have been heavily involved in [1753.74 --> 1760.26] pushing pearl 6 along jonathan worthington he was a pearl 5 hacker but mostly focuses on pearl 6 now and [1760.26 --> 1764.46] he's been doing a lot of work putting it on the jvm and writing something called more vm [1764.46 --> 1770.42] so there's now originally it was a bunch of pearl 5 hackers now there's a completely separate [1770.42 --> 1775.16] community of people from a variety of different backgrounds many of them academic many of them [1775.16 --> 1780.14] uh basically you know heavily involved in the real world who have been building pearl 6 many of whom [1780.14 --> 1787.00] have no background in pearl 5 anymore so is pearl 6 out there in production or is it still kind of at a [1787.00 --> 1792.30] at an experimental phase i do know there are some folks who have been using it in production [1792.30 --> 1798.76] generally they're using this for smaller tools the sort of small tools that you might uh build shell [1798.76 --> 1803.34] scripts for because that's a little bit safer a little bit lower risk uh large-scale systems [1803.34 --> 1810.64] are generally not being built in pearl 6 yet um there is more work to be done with the final work for [1810.64 --> 1817.88] porting it to more vm and the jvm to finally get a production ready there's more i can say about that [1817.88 --> 1824.90] but i don't know how much i'm actually allowed to say uh simply because um for the long time [1824.90 --> 1829.00] pearl 6 has always been promised by christmas but we just don't say which one [1829.00 --> 1835.00] yeah i'm reading some commentary behind the scenes here just sort of listening to you by the way i love [1835.00 --> 1841.98] that explanation of roles versus inheritance that was um really great but some some thoughts here from [1841.98 --> 1847.90] reddit i'm not sure that's the best place to go for thoughts but um it seems like people have this [1847.90 --> 1852.36] huge question in the brook community about what's happening worth pearl 6 then even specifically [1852.36 --> 1859.02] larry wall you've mentioned a couple times and whether or not it's uh they've questioned um the code [1859.02 --> 1865.50] quality uh or sorry the language designs not so much code quality but uh some other things happening [1865.50 --> 1870.84] there it seems like stepping back to earlier you mentioned this you know maybe it's not so much [1870.84 --> 1875.18] marketing maybe it's communication and that's where i feel like having you on the show today and [1875.18 --> 1880.24] just sort of getting this bird's eye view from uh someone inside the community that's been there for a [1880.24 --> 1886.04] while that's sort of as you said uh by accident to a degree a happy accident that you can sort of [1886.04 --> 1891.86] disseminate this idea of what pearl 6 is going to be and what profile is doing currently because [1891.86 --> 1898.62] uh to rewind just a tiny bit you mentioned you had a role a role um roles and pearl and i believe [1898.62 --> 1906.46] it's role basic is that your is that your version of roles yes there's there's a second traits paper [1906.46 --> 1912.58] um let me see the typed calculus no a traits the formal definition i think is the name which despite [1912.58 --> 1918.56] the name is actually a fairly easy to read paper which unfortunately i consider to be the traits paper [1918.56 --> 1923.70] that no one has ever read but should um and it's absolutely fantastic and it clears up a lot of the [1923.70 --> 1928.60] communication i've actually spoken with a number of traits researchers to clarify some of the issues in there [1928.62 --> 1935.34] um and traits themselves still have some issues um i should call them roles just because that's what [1935.34 --> 1940.40] pearl does they still have some issues because this is programming and in programming we don't have [1940.40 --> 1945.56] perfect systems anywhere but they are the best thing to come along and i have worked with you know so [1945.56 --> 1951.18] many alternatives and they do solve so many problems but yes i wrote role basic in an attempt to [1951.18 --> 1958.44] create a system that goes back to the original definition and truly respects uh some of the rules [1958.44 --> 1964.92] such as uh you know being commutative and associative for example if you have a role which uh does json [1964.92 --> 1973.18] serialization and you have a role which uh does i don't know yaml serialization and if you compose [1973.18 --> 1979.18] both of those roles they should it doesn't matter which order you compose them in unlike you know inheritance [1979.18 --> 1986.90] or mixins it's guaranteed you get the same behavior technically it is possible to violate this contract [1986.90 --> 1995.06] uh with roles or if you have the role which does json serialization consumes another role which does [1995.06 --> 2002.70] marshalling um you might just decide no i'm going to consume my does marshalling role and that is going to [2002.70 --> 2008.30] consume the does json and does yaml role so i'll get all of the serialization methods all at once [2008.30 --> 2014.66] but in theory according to the original traits research it doesn't matter how you consume those [2014.66 --> 2020.60] how you mix and match those in roles it is possible for that contract to be violated depending upon how [2020.60 --> 2027.44] you do it it's unusual for this to happen and you know dedicated programmers who know that you know [2027.44 --> 2031.38] different methods should actually have different method names are really good about avoiding those [2031.38 --> 2037.80] problems but there are still some subtle edge cases but they are in my experience more than an order [2037.80 --> 2044.44] of magnitude less than you have the edge cases with mixins and inheritance so you probably do most of [2044.44 --> 2051.56] your programming in pearl 5 right yes and this role basic is that what you use for your roles or because [2051.56 --> 2055.70] you said this is your version of it there was another one out there you mentioned um but i didn't catch [2055.70 --> 2063.00] that one though i use uh there's also a role tiny i use almost exclusively moose role because moose is [2063.00 --> 2067.64] the most fully fledged object-oriented system out there and i'm not just talking about for pearl [2067.64 --> 2074.54] moose is it brings a lot of the power of you know what we would typically associate with static languages [2074.54 --> 2081.70] to dynamic languages so when i declare an attribute such as social security number i can say a social [2081.70 --> 2086.14] security number is a and then i can define a very rigid type constraint for what that social security [2086.14 --> 2090.42] number is and rather than you know embedding my code with a whole bunch of type checks everywhere [2090.42 --> 2093.96] you know is a social security number really fitting the format of social security number [2093.96 --> 2099.68] are the first three digits allowed first three digits or not i can simply declare a social security [2099.68 --> 2103.62] type have that provide the validation and anything which consumes a social security number [2103.62 --> 2109.82] it has to match that type or it's going to fail and this is something you often don't get [2109.82 --> 2115.68] with many dynamic languages we tend to play fast and loose with our data but there's so many powerful [2115.68 --> 2121.52] things you can do such as lazy evaluation of attributes so you don't create the connection [2121.52 --> 2126.90] to the database unless you actually ask for the connection to the database or you know just being [2126.90 --> 2130.82] able to list all of your attributes but on top of that you have meta programming so i use meta [2130.82 --> 2136.84] programming quite heavily i built something called test class moose which is basically a an x-unit framework [2136.84 --> 2143.48] for large scale enterprise class databases if you will and it's being used more and more and what [2143.48 --> 2150.56] what i've done with the metadata system within moose is i'm able to inspect the methods to figure out [2150.56 --> 2155.28] what test methods are available i'm able to find out what attributes are available i'm able to compose [2155.28 --> 2160.66] roles into things so i can have roles defining fixtures so i can easily load fixtures on demand [2160.66 --> 2167.70] and if you've never played with meta programming before it is hard to appreciate the power of it [2167.70 --> 2173.06] and once you play with meta programming you never want to go back because it makes so many of your [2173.06 --> 2181.14] problems so much simpler the cost is the software you build is simpler it is easier to write it is [2181.14 --> 2185.52] faster right it's a little bit harder for some other people to understand it because most people [2185.52 --> 2192.26] don't understand the concept of meta programming at first it sounds like you uh also i mean you [2192.26 --> 2196.48] mentioned testing here a few times in that conversation obviously when you're meta programming [2196.48 --> 2201.78] and when you have dynamic languages um testing becomes a huge part of that you know assurance that [2201.78 --> 2206.38] things are still working the way that you wanted them to um you said you wrote a test harness that [2206.38 --> 2211.68] ships with the language um maybe tell us about the testing story in the pearl community whether it's [2211.68 --> 2216.52] tdd style or uh kind of what the just what the community looks like and as far as testing code [2216.52 --> 2222.94] goes pearl has possibly i mean ruby talks about themselves just being test infected and they have [2222.94 --> 2230.86] nothing on pearl if so cpan the um this is the central archive of pearl code that most developers tend [2230.86 --> 2237.94] to push their code towards and if i push my code up to the cpan it's immediately pushed out to the cpan [2237.94 --> 2243.94] testers network where people are running the tests for my code on all sorts of different flavors of [2243.94 --> 2250.18] linux all sorts of different flavors of windows all sorts of different macs uh on aix on solaris you [2250.18 --> 2254.00] name it my code is being tested there with tons of different operating systems tons of different [2254.00 --> 2258.12] versions of pearl and i find out very quickly which operating systems which versions of pearl [2258.12 --> 2265.24] my tests are failing on and this is for free and this is the sort of thing that enterprise [2265.24 --> 2272.10] customers can pay hundreds of thousands of dollars a year for right and there are millions and millions [2272.10 --> 2278.08] literally of test reports out there on cpan testers and when you go out there and you pull up [2278.08 --> 2284.24] one of the versions of your module and you know my version of this module you know 1.14 happens to fail [2284.24 --> 2291.72] on solaris with pearl 516 and then you can go and if you've written your tests well for printing out [2291.72 --> 2296.36] good explanations of what's going on with your test you can say oh now i understand what's failing [2296.36 --> 2300.88] and even if you don't know solaris you can contact a solaris user or perhaps a person who originally [2300.88 --> 2306.52] ran it on their what we call smoke machines they're smokers and say my module failed on your machine with [2306.52 --> 2311.44] this version of pearl can you help me with this and you get this powerful free feedback that is [2311.44 --> 2318.12] virtually impossible to get otherwise and anytime i upload a new module to the cpan i get hundreds and [2318.12 --> 2325.76] hundreds of test reports coming back very quickly and it's just phenomenal and i don't see that other [2325.76 --> 2331.52] places if i want to install a module on my local machine i can have the option to run the tests or [2331.52 --> 2337.44] not so if i want to run the tests i can see what's going on i can give feedback to the module authors it's [2337.44 --> 2343.20] very easy and it's gotten to the point it's very very much frowned upon for popular modules to be [2343.20 --> 2349.20] uploaded to cpan without tests and the test coverage is just phenomenal in many of these [2349.20 --> 2354.60] modules and it really it's nice for me as a developer when i'm recommending you know use this [2354.60 --> 2359.34] new module in your code base because it's going to save you a lot of time and trouble and they say [2359.34 --> 2363.98] well is it robust and i can say look at this test suite look at all these test results and all these [2363.98 --> 2368.76] different operating systems all these different versions of pearl look at all those green bars there [2368.76 --> 2374.82] and it's just fantastic so i love it makes me very happy i did not know that about cpan that [2374.82 --> 2381.86] tester what do you call it the test smokers uh the smokers um it's oh my goodness i'm trying to [2381.86 --> 2388.72] remember the name um it's something that i've taken for granted for so long to be quite honest uh the [2388.72 --> 2395.82] cpan reporters um i would have to go and look up the url offhand but it's you know you can go out [2395.82 --> 2399.72] there very quickly and see all of the test reports which are available for all of your modules but [2399.72 --> 2404.86] this is free and anything anyone uploads is automatically run through the system by just [2404.86 --> 2409.84] dedicated volunteers so it's not something you have to sign up for it's not something you have [2409.84 --> 2415.58] to ask for it just automatically happens for you that's awesome you know when i was back in college [2415.58 --> 2421.12] and i was doing some pearl um i liked the language i still like it to this day i think you know i saw the [2421.12 --> 2426.38] the value especially in the regular expression stuff back then that just was so easy comparative [2426.38 --> 2432.48] to what i had done previously um and cpan was always boasted as you know this great thing now as [2432.48 --> 2439.40] a fledgling young programmer i'm probably like 2001 2002 man i just could not figure cpan out um i [2439.40 --> 2443.54] couldn't even get past like the configure step to get that thing out there i'm just trying to get [2443.54 --> 2449.44] somebody else's code on my system um and i'm sure it's an isolated incident but maybe give us [2449.44 --> 2455.62] um some background on cpan i know that it's it's much touted as as a great system it sounds like [2455.62 --> 2461.30] that the automated testing thing is really cool tell us more about it so the cpan is a comprehensive [2461.30 --> 2467.52] pearl archive network and there's a module cpan.pm which comes shipped core with pearl so when you [2467.52 --> 2474.36] first download pearl you can run the cpan command cpan all over case and what you experienced was a [2474.36 --> 2479.74] a long-standing problem today what it does is it says oh this is the first time you're running cpan [2479.74 --> 2484.36] would you like me to configure as much as i can automatically you hit yes and it magically works [2484.36 --> 2493.08] that sounds great so that's not what i was having i know yeah basically they they took the trouble to [2493.08 --> 2498.12] make the pain go away so i often install new versions of pearl i'm playing around with different things [2498.12 --> 2503.94] i set up cpan for the first time and if i select yes um occasionally it might pick a mirror too far [2503.94 --> 2511.74] away from me but aside from that it works beautifully and it's not a problem you also have cpan minus [2511.74 --> 2520.50] so app cpan so cpan min dot us um that's the site which has a very simple that has a very simple [2520.50 --> 2525.70] command that you can run which will allow you to install cpan minus which is kind of like cpan [2525.70 --> 2530.78] except it does even less so cpan when it downloads your code it will download all the dependencies run [2530.78 --> 2535.16] all the tests and then you have some dependency failing on a test which is completely unrelated to [2535.16 --> 2541.36] what you're doing or cpan minus will just take all the pain away and just build your code and install [2541.36 --> 2546.52] it for you very quickly and it's very powerful and most of the time it just works wonderfully so we're [2546.52 --> 2551.68] actually winding up with multiple different solutions depending upon what your particular needs are how [2551.68 --> 2555.98] thorough do you want your test coverage to be are you not worried about that do you want to just [2555.98 --> 2561.22] install a simple module quickly most of it's just painless and people don't have to worry about it [2561.22 --> 2566.24] anymore so what you discovered was a long-standing complaint but it pretty much doesn't exist today [2566.24 --> 2573.14] cool cool i just loaded up cpan minus and it redirected me to a github page which makes me which [2573.14 --> 2578.98] makes me wonder like where are y'all at with git and github and having code be publicly available on those [2578.98 --> 2585.60] on on github at least yeah embarrassingly enough i just had the same thing yeah is that so is that [2585.60 --> 2592.36] not supposed to happen it wasn't happening a few days ago okay so that makes for a very awkward turn [2592.36 --> 2601.04] for this conversation or a or a perfectly intended turn yeah in our eyes so many pearl developers are [2601.04 --> 2607.24] heavily uh involved in using git so my company actually offers git training also just because it's [2607.24 --> 2612.38] incredibly popular and it was interesting that you know i would have svn available for the long time [2612.38 --> 2617.50] for the longest time and you know oh you can submit patches to my modules you know via svn or you know [2617.50 --> 2623.54] just using the diff patch command whatever um and i could count on the fingers of one hand the number of [2623.54 --> 2629.92] patches i would get per year since i switched to doing most of my development and sharing my code on github [2629.92 --> 2636.02] i'm getting patches all the time and it's just phenomenal and because the pearl community is very keen [2636.02 --> 2643.84] about testing and documentation i'm usually getting patches with full documentation full tests or if [2643.84 --> 2647.68] they don't have them people will say you know this is just exploratory to solve this little itch that i [2647.68 --> 2652.70] have what do you think and it's a way of collaboration that you know just didn't exist before and i'm very [2652.70 --> 2657.68] very pleased about that most of the pearl communities bought into it cool and are those integrated git and [2657.68 --> 2664.90] c or github and cpan as far as publishing goes you have you have what are called metafiles available [2664.90 --> 2673.52] in your distributions which can say um my bug queue is actually out on github the actual base repository [2673.52 --> 2679.26] is on github so if you go out to cpan and someone set up their metafiles correctly you can just click [2679.26 --> 2684.20] directly on the source repository and it'll take you over to you know github or click on the bug tracker [2684.20 --> 2689.38] instead of the built-in rt trackers that cpan uses it can take you over to the github track tracker [2689.38 --> 2695.56] or any other site you want it's not just tied into github specifically it's a generic system saying [2695.56 --> 2702.08] this is where my you know source repository actually is this is where my bug tracker actually is and it [2702.08 --> 2707.48] just handles it for you but it's very agnostic about the cpan isn't tied into github but it's [2707.48 --> 2713.34] probably the most popular alternative today we're gonna pause the show for just a minute give a shout out [2713.34 --> 2719.88] to a sponsor status page dot io is a new sponsor for us we're glad to have them it's all about [2719.88 --> 2726.18] transparency during downtime and the best way i know to do that is to use status page dot io to create a [2726.18 --> 2732.14] status page for your app or your website so you can have an always up and always on way to communicate [2732.14 --> 2737.64] to your customers when you're in a bad situation your customers can subscribe to updates you can [2737.64 --> 2742.84] broadcast upcoming maintenance windows you can post updates minute by minute hour by hour keeping [2742.84 --> 2748.58] everyone informed everyone on the know integration with services like new relic and pingdom allow you [2748.58 --> 2753.04] to show off graphs to your customers that they care about you can even embed your system status [2753.04 --> 2759.36] within your actual app head to status page dot io to get started it's free to set up launch it when [2759.36 --> 2766.56] you're ready and tell them the changelog sent you and now back to the show so as the cpan sort of act as a [2766.56 --> 2772.76] registry in that case then more like here's where pro modules go and you can find and install new [2772.76 --> 2778.52] pro modules via cpan is that how that works yes that is far and away the most popular option there's [2778.52 --> 2787.02] also metacpan.org um with the search right yes and some people like that some people don't uh myself uh i [2787.02 --> 2792.40] i think it's interesting but i'm so old school and i'm so used to search cpan.org that i don't even [2792.40 --> 2797.84] remember that there's a www cpan.org i just hit search cpan.org i look for the things that i want [2797.84 --> 2803.86] i read about them i read the test results i read the code yeah okay i'll use this so in your community [2803.86 --> 2809.40] or in your sorry in your opinion what is the the state of the community the pro community in terms of [2809.40 --> 2815.32] transitioning the open source work they do have out there to github because you said that [2815.32 --> 2820.12] earlier you do some get training and stuff like that what is the state of the pro community as it [2820.12 --> 2826.82] relates to github and open source on github and just general availability of of i think what we see [2826.82 --> 2832.46] over the last three or four years just more and more and more developers moving to github is just a [2832.46 --> 2838.62] a better way to socially code together and pearl's been open source since the beginning so it just seems [2838.62 --> 2844.12] like a natural fit for them y'all to eventually move there but what's the state the way it's working right [2844.12 --> 2851.58] now is most of the tool chain available for pearl is centered around cpan so cpan is a central [2851.58 --> 2859.44] repository for the canonical versions of modules and people use github for collaboration i have a [2859.44 --> 2864.28] number of modules which are available out on github for doing various things that i don't have the [2864.28 --> 2868.16] latest versions of those modules out on cpan because i want what's on cpan to be a little bit [2868.16 --> 2873.92] more stable and if i move it from github to the cpan and i'm not entirely comfortable with it i might [2873.92 --> 2879.10] mark it as a developer release so that it won't be installed by default but we use github for [2879.10 --> 2885.10] collaboration for sharing for talking about new ideas we use cpan as the central repository so that [2885.10 --> 2890.22] when you want to install code or you want to manage your cpan code via pinto or something like that [2890.22 --> 2896.68] that you know the one spot to go for that that makes a lot of sense one last question then we'll get [2896.68 --> 2901.60] to the close here so it seems like each language especially talking about web uh web programming [2901.60 --> 2907.14] languages they all kind of have their killer app you know uh ruby has rails you know you might say [2907.14 --> 2914.06] php has wordpress uh javascript has node and you know python has django and and there's alternatives [2914.06 --> 2919.60] of course is there like a go-to uh web tool or framework in the pearl community that everybody's [2919.60 --> 2925.92] using or is it more kind of diverse it's definitely more kind of diverse there are a number of really [2925.92 --> 2934.20] phenomenal tools out there so catalyst is has for the longest time been the default web tool and many [2934.20 --> 2939.62] of the clients that i go into today are using catalyst and catalyst is a wonderful framework [2939.62 --> 2944.64] mostly based around the concept of mvc but one of the things that differs from some of the [2944.64 --> 2950.72] competitors and other languages if you will is that it's agnostic about the mv and c components however [2950.72 --> 2957.70] you want to plug those in um do you want to use dbx class for your you know the back end with for the [2957.70 --> 2962.42] orm which is going to be backing up whatever your model is eventually going to be do you want to use [2962.42 --> 2966.86] rose db do you want to use something different what do you want to have in your view layer to present [2966.86 --> 2970.96] things to people you know from the html you know do you want to use template toolkit do you want to use [2970.96 --> 2977.30] template xslate do you want to use you know mason what do you want to do is however you want to set it up [2977.30 --> 2982.94] so there's a bit more of a learning curve for that but it means you can customize for exactly what you [2982.94 --> 2988.94] need there's other things which are extremely popular such as dancer 2 and mojolicious which [2988.94 --> 2993.32] have different philosophies which are very easy to use they're lighter weight than catalyst they're [2993.32 --> 2998.60] not as fully featured as catalyst but they are so easy to use and so powerful that you know i'm seeing [2998.60 --> 3005.06] more and more sites switch over to them and they're really nice when you talk about the orm layer dbx class [3005.06 --> 3011.16] is just an absolutely phenomenal orm rose db is also excellent it's not as popular it's just [3011.16 --> 3018.42] blazingly fast this is if you like orms i know i know that not everyone does we have an embarrassing [3018.42 --> 3024.98] richness of powerful tools because the community pro community has been around so much longer than [3024.98 --> 3030.84] many of the other communities that we have a number of very mature products out there but [3030.84 --> 3036.90] unfortunately that means if someone says what should i use for you know writing this brilliant [3036.90 --> 3041.52] new website that i have you said well you've got this you've got this you've got this and all of them [3041.52 --> 3048.06] are excellent all of them have pros and cons and a lot of people i just want that one thing and they [3048.06 --> 3052.12] just want to be told what to do and that's a little bit harder to do with pearl because we have [3052.12 --> 3059.42] you know an embarrassment of riches if you will excellent excellent so just to preempt the haters [3059.42 --> 3065.62] uh yes i realize that no i realize that node is more than just a web thing i just want to get that [3065.62 --> 3071.26] out there in case um people thought that that was what i was trying to say um very cool man it sounds [3071.26 --> 3077.64] like you guys got a lot going on um every time i talk with somebody on the show i end up being like [3077.64 --> 3082.96] i gotta go look into what is going on in this community so uh ovid you did a great job representing [3082.96 --> 3088.16] pearl uh yeah do you you said you do consulting you have a book anything you want to uh plug or [3088.16 --> 3093.86] promote and while you're here i would say that our company's website is allaroundtheworld.fr [3093.86 --> 3100.58] that's because we're based in france we do pearl consulting we really specialize in going into [3100.58 --> 3105.22] companies which have older legacy systems and rebuilding them testing them making the modern [3105.22 --> 3110.66] systems easier to work on we offer database training get training um i also teach companies [3110.66 --> 3116.78] how do you how to use agile appropriately or if they should use agile because that's not always true [3116.78 --> 3125.84] and so it's it's kind of oh goodness i can we could spend easily a couple of hours with me going [3125.84 --> 3132.10] off about why agile is wonderful and why it is not wonderful and i would follow you both ways [3132.10 --> 3140.48] it's yeah because i have some opinions there as well i'm a strong strong agile fan but it's not [3140.48 --> 3146.46] always the right choice that's right so we we do a lot of things but mostly it's database get training [3146.46 --> 3153.18] uh teaching testing and particularly myself and our other associates going in and fixing people's [3153.18 --> 3159.68] legacy data uh pearl systems and making them easier to use it's amazing how much work there is there [3159.68 --> 3164.08] any any particular repos you want to mention that you've got on github or anywhere else that uh [3164.08 --> 3170.28] that you can use some extra firepower behind like uh some attention to oh my favorite one is [3170.28 --> 3175.50] unfortunately a private repo it's uh some a project code named veer which no one's seen but i've [3175.50 --> 3180.12] talked about it a lot of my blogs i'm building a text-based mmorpg in pearl [3180.12 --> 3188.76] when's that going to get out there i'm hoping to have christmas by christmas i'm hoping to have an [3188.76 --> 3194.30] elf out by the end of next year we actually might have a new developer being pulled up in on it this [3194.30 --> 3199.74] year uh there's actually been mmorpgs written in pearl before but this one um i found an interesting [3199.74 --> 3205.48] niche in the market which is completely uncovered and which was a lot of fun so i'm just building a [3205.48 --> 3210.92] science fiction world a true rpg not one of these things you just click around on like bulletin boards [3210.92 --> 3216.76] on the web but it's text-based so i'm having a lot of fun with that otherwise i would tell people [3216.76 --> 3222.96] check out my test class moose repository if you're interested in pearl and you need to build a large [3222.96 --> 3230.04] scale test suite it's much much better than many of the other alternatives out there for the same [3230.04 --> 3234.14] reason you wouldn't build a huge website today without choosing an appropriate framework you don't want [3234.14 --> 3240.30] to build a huge test suite without choosing an appropriate framework we can't uh we can't [3240.30 --> 3245.22] obviously close this show unless we ask the the notorious question which is who is your programming [3245.22 --> 3249.36] hero and i figure with uh some of the names you've mentioned today you probably either will repeat [3249.36 --> 3255.94] them or you'll have new heroes to mention so um let us know who your hero is oh you're not going to [3255.94 --> 3265.22] believe me my programming heroes are my cobalt professors in college um the reason for that is [3265.22 --> 3271.12] so my java instructors i remember our very first java instructor she was fresh out of uni and she had [3271.12 --> 3276.94] trouble explaining the difference between a class and an instance and it didn't appear that she was a bad [3276.94 --> 3282.96] teacher she just seemed a little confused on the concept my second java instructor um i accidentally [3282.96 --> 3287.92] turned in some code with some j unit tests and he was confused and kicked it back and said he didn't [3287.92 --> 3294.18] understand what that was um i've had this happen with um professors in a number of different programming [3294.18 --> 3299.32] languages who's who just didn't have real world experience but the cobalt teachers they had actually [3299.32 --> 3306.64] come back in from the field many many years of experience and were able to give a class full of students who [3306.64 --> 3314.42] were often you know not very interested or you know not very responsive excellent real world descriptions [3314.42 --> 3321.10] of what you need and i still remember the time i was trying to sign up for a c class at a uni and they [3321.10 --> 3326.40] told me we don't offer c anymore because the future is object-oriented and c is obsolete [3326.40 --> 3336.78] yes completely ivory tower but the cobalt developers they the programmers the professors they understood [3336.78 --> 3342.36] that okay it's not the most popular thing out there but they had tons of real world experience which they [3342.36 --> 3347.26] were able to communicate in a way that my other professors didn't and they were some of the best [3347.26 --> 3351.86] examples i had of what we actually need out there for teaching the next generation of students [3351.86 --> 3358.70] the combination between deep theory that is really useful at surprising times but the real world [3358.70 --> 3366.24] pragmatism of i gotta get stuff done so they are my programming heroes even though no one knows their [3366.24 --> 3373.46] name no one cares about them they're the ones that we need to see a lot more of you know often uh you [3373.46 --> 3378.88] know teachers end up being heroes anyways that's just a good thing at least you know on this show reach [3378.88 --> 3383.86] back out to them i wonder if uh if they happen to know that uh they're your heroes money chance [3383.86 --> 3390.64] but i should find out and contact them what'd you say i said i should find out and contact them at some [3390.64 --> 3395.66] point yeah i mean because you know anytime you've touched somebody's life it's it's nice to know because [3395.66 --> 3400.54] it's it's sort of like this uh pay it forward you know for teachers they don't always see the fruits of their [3400.54 --> 3405.04] labor uh they don't have the luxury of instant gratification you know that's sort of like [3405.04 --> 3409.90] plant a seed and it grows over years and years and years and often oftentimes that person goes on [3409.90 --> 3414.64] to do great things and i'll be nuts to that person but i know that i've got a couple heroes who are [3414.64 --> 3420.68] like that so just saying but okay curtis it's uh it's definitely been a pleasure having you on the [3420.68 --> 3425.30] show i think that uh you've given jared and i uh some food for thought so to speak on on the pro [3425.30 --> 3430.28] community and the pro ecosystem and how we can sort of support that in in our own way here at the [3430.28 --> 3436.36] changelog to just help with this communication and marketing divide of pearl five versus six and [3436.36 --> 3441.48] just in general what's happening it seems like you got a lot of fun great things happening that uh [3441.48 --> 3447.00] that just need a maybe a clear i don't even i don't even know how to say it but i'm sure there's [3447.00 --> 3450.36] some way we can help so we'll we'll do whatever we can to to help you and help the pro community [3450.36 --> 3454.76] um we do want to mention a couple sponsors to help make this show possible before we close out [3454.76 --> 3461.96] code ship rack space and status page dot io all great sponsors of the show we uh we couldn't do [3461.96 --> 3467.86] without their help so uh curtis jared let's uh let's say goodbye adam jared thank you very much [3467.86 --> 3468.38] i had a blast [3484.76 --> 3507.08] all right guess no bye from jared i forgot to say goodbye [3507.08 --> 3515.42] i had to say goodbye real quick goodbye just don't worry about oh i had my thing you've got [3515.42 --> 3521.76] to include that in the clip i was muted the podcast i was i was muted i said goodbye to myself [3521.76 --> 3526.76] on mute that's funny i'm like i felt like i said goodbye |