“Perl Best Practices” as a useful good night story

“Perl Best Practices” – O’Reilly Media

I really like reading good night stories for my sons late in the evening, but I hate reading “Spiderman fights Hulk“, absolutely. Really!
Now, I actually found out years ago, that it doesn’t really matter to the kids, what you read, but that you like, what you read to them.
Last night I selected a book, which didn’t come into operation then, but with one day delay today it actually did so.
Pls find the title attached! (This referred to, when this article was a Google Buzz and there was even a picture attached. I do love Google Buzz, but the number of followers is rather depressing, I actually prefer not to know, how many usually read my blogs. And last week’s Google presentation of the Buzz API at Berlin.Betahaus.de with finest catering and unlimited free drinks even encouraged me to love it more.)
Now you may understand, what I referred to by: “it doesn’t really matter to the kids…
You may even think, I am a bad father. I seriously don’t agree. Well, the useless social workers of the “youth welfare office” at Berlin might agree with you. But then, I don’t care.
Son#2 literally slept within minutes, which is otherwise never easy to achieve. (He can easily fought 2 hours against his sleepiness.)
Now this either has to do with the quality of the book, or simply with my son liking my voice. Choose yourself!
Son#2 actually started sleeping deeply in the middle of the preface, but I insisted on completing the preface, of course w/o even touching the acknowledgements. Sorry for that. Maybe I will browse them silently another day. I do find names interesting, and after 30 years in IT you do know a few ones.

After that I decided to get the PDF for $5 from O’Reilly’s, and I immediately went for it. That PDF is now on my disk. I even think parts of this book will make good presentation material at future Berlin Technical Perl Meetings, well, maybe Stuttgart Technical Perl Meetings, if the Berlin Perl Mongers are lucky enough resp. not lucky enough. Decide yourself, which way it’s meant!

This book looks like entertaining but educative literature, just the way I considered Larry Wall’ classical Camel Book almost 20 years ago. But I read it then in the Berlin Underground on my way to work or back home.

Pls have mercy and excuse my Bad Simple English!


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