note
missingthepoint
<p>First, welcome to the Monastery :)</p>
<p>May I ask how you're trying to learn? There are good ways and bad ways (and terrible ways, hopefully we can steer you clear of those).</p>
<p>I agree with [ELISHEVA]'s advice: write lots of small, simple programs, that each demonstrate one particular fact about how Perl works. Experiment. In this way you can "ask questions" about how Perl works. For instance:</p>
<c>
my $a = 'perl';
my $b = '$a is good';
my $c = "$a is good";
print "a=$a\n";
print "b=$b\n";
print "c=$c\n";
</c>
<p>Running this program is equivalent to asking "do variables interpolate in 1) single-quoted strings (<c>$b</c>) and 2) double-quoted strings (<c>$c</c>)?" (By interpolate, I mean, are the variables replaced by their values, or do you just see the variable's name.) Running this will give you the answer.</p>
<p>If you can give us more information on how you're going about learning, we can probably help. :)</p>
<div class="pmsig"><div class="pmsig-668384">
<hr />
<small>The zeroeth step in writing a module is to make sure that there isn't already a decent one in CPAN. (-- [mod://Pod::Simple::Subclassing])</small>
</div></div>
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