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<node id="46492" title="Re: (thoughts on) Detect common lines between two files, one liner from shell" created="2000-12-13 21:36:11" updated="2005-08-05 11:08:39">
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note</type>
<author id="33341">
Albannach</author>
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While I can see how [id://46465|Stephen] is looking at this
as an obfuscation-in-progress, and others are looking at it
as just plain obfuscated, this type of thing is a great example
of why I love playing around with Perl. Don't get me wrong, I
certainly thought [merlyn] had left out a few lines when I
first looked at it, but after a couple of minutes it really
started to look beautiful (I'm sick, I know...).
In this fine example, [merlyn]:&lt;br&gt;
- didn't redefine any defaults&lt;br&gt;
- didn't use any obscure, poorly documented features&lt;br&gt;
- didn't even use single-letter variable names&lt;br&gt;
- heck, it's even full of wasted spaces&lt;br&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
He simply made excellent use of the well-documented default 
behaviours which even I use every day.  It still amazes
me that [id://153|St. ][http://www.wall.org/~larry/|Larry] (and some Perl elves) thought up all these
behaviours which often look odd to me at first, but eventually dovetail together 
so well it's hard to imagine all of these uses weren't considered.
Maybe after I've been here long enough I'll be able to come up with better 
ways to fit the parts together too.&lt;br&gt;
 
&lt;p&gt;--&lt;br&gt;
I'd like to be able to assign to an luser</field>
<field name="root_node">
36725</field>
<field name="parent_node">
36725</field>
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