Originally published at Perl Weekly 594
Hi there,
The Advent Calendar celebration begins with the start of December. For all Perl fans, we have Perl Advent Calendar 2022, thanks to the hard work of Olaf Alders and his team. I am sure you have checked out the amazing daily source of fun.
As of today, we have got through 12 days.
Do you have any favourite so far?
Well I do have mine. To me the best part is the festive flavour in every article. I find it amusing and fun to read the story. I have contributed in the past but never got around to add the spice. I would blame the lack of background knowledge. This year's calendar started with Toby Inkster creation Silent Mite. What a cool way to start the calendar. If you look at closely all the contributions so far, you would notice a fresh air with lots of positive energy. One name stands out very prominently this year is Thibault DUPONCHELLE. His first contribution, Santa is on GitHub was a nice way to begin the journey. Then found a gem from a very dear friend of mine, Julien Fiegehenn talking about good old friend CGI. In fact, I have seen him presenting the subject northpole.cgi at the Perl Conference. I found another piece of work by Thibault DUPONCHELLE about MongoDB. I found the Day 5 contribution Catching dreams is worth checking, if you want to explore MongoDB. If I am not mistaken then few years ago, Dave Cross shared his creation SVG::ChristmasTree in Perl Advent Calendar. I was happy to see it part of this year calendar too, not directly though. Day 8 started with A Perlmas Tree by Maximilian Lika. I found Day 11 contribution very technical dealing with signal ALRM. Not an easy subject to discuss in the Advent Calendar in my humble opinion. Thanks OODLER for the fine contribution, Wake up! Time to open presents!.
If you are still looking for more Advent Calendar theme fun then I would highly recommend, The Weekly Challenge Advent Calendar. Like in the past, this year also, it has contributions from Team PWC hand picked by me. I am sure you would find it interesting.
I am working on something that I would love to be part of this year Perl Advent Calendar. Hopefully it would be ready soon. Well I am also working on something similar for Raku Advent Calendar. It would be an achievement if I can get both done on time. Please wish me luck.
Enjoy rest of the newsletter.
--
Your editor: Mohammad S. Anwar.
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Advent Calendar
Silent Mite
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Santa is on GitHub
northpole.cgi
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The Sleigh odometer
A Perlmas Tree
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The Christmas Time Machine
Wake up! Time to open presents!
The Weekly Challenge
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RECAP - The Weekly Challenge - 194
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The Weekly Challenge Advent Calendar 2022
Digital Frequalizer
Lots of Raku magic shared as every week. Plenty to keep you busy. Thanks for sharing.
Bag Time!
I noticed sharp observations about the task. Good catch. Well done and keep it up great work.
Freq Out, Man!
Deep task analysis is not to be missed. Highly recommended.
PWC194 - Digital Clock
Flavio makes the task simple to follow. What a treat, thank you.
PWC194 - Frequency Equalizer
The frank and open discussion is the highlight. Plenty to keep up busy every week.
iffy solutions
James introduced new term to me, IIFE. Thanks for your contributions every week.
Digital Clock and Frequency Equalizer
Great demo of Perl and Raku with such an ease. Thanks for sharing knowledge with us.
regular expressions everywhere!
Are you regex fan? If yes then this is for you. Thank you.
Perl Weekly Challenge 194
Once again we got the demo of PDL this week. Thanks for sharing the knowledge with us.
Completing the time and levelling the letters
Compact collection of various test cases. This makes the logic easy to follow. Keep it up great work.
Digital Equaliser
Advise and suggestions in the blog post is worth checking. Thanks for sharing knowledge with us.
Digital frequency
For both Perl and Python fans, have fun. Well done.
PWC 194
Blog post showing the porting of Perl solution to Raku and Julia. Plenty to learn every week.
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NICEPERL's lists
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StackOverflow Perl report.
The corner of Gabor
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How to create cpanfile by "perl Makefile.PL"?
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Canadian Municipal GitHub Rankings
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Jumphost - Pull Switch Configs with Perl
How to install cpanm using HTTP::Tiny and Perl oneliner?
I am not sure it is really needed as Strawberry Perl for Windows, the only place where you don't have built in curl already comes with cpanm preinstalled. But nevertheless an interesting possibility.
Day 9: CI for Mojo-UserAgent-Cached and Plack-Middleware-Greylist
63 Corporations that share Open Source code
Since I posted this, I added a lot more corporations. Thanks to contribution of Dean Hamstead as well.
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(C) Copyright Gabor Szabo
The articles are copyright the respective authors.