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Re: Perl losing momentum ?

by moritz (Cardinal)
on Jan 30, 2008 at 12:03 UTC ( [id://665107]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to Perl losing momentum ?

I never thought of GUI design as one of Perl's strengths.

For many Perl programmers the strengths are in the fields of log file analysis, database connectivity and dynamic web pages. And I haven't found any evidence for a decline in these areas, especially not in the first two.

(I personally use Perl for nearly everything, but that's a different matter).

GUIs fit very nicely in the object oriented paradigm (a window is an object, a button is a object etc.), and while supported by perl, it's certainly not it's strong field.

So it doesn't surprise me when you say that other, object oriented languages have nicer, more up-to-date GUI bindings.

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Re^2: Perl losing momentum ?
by amarquis (Curate) on Feb 01, 2008 at 16:19 UTC

    Your post got me thinking about what Perl is good for.

    I can't talk about the full-time programming crowd, but I've no doubts that Perl is a great tool for anybody multi-disciplinary. Heck, my job title has "marketing" in it, and I'm using Perl all the time. I've got voluminous logs of e-commerce activity every day, I've got database systems here and with our distributors that don't speak each other's language, and we outsource our IT so I've got some "make these systems work" sorts of problems that come my way. Given all that, Perl helps me save a boatload of time and do my job better.

    I've a lot of friends in intro-level IT sorts of positions, too, and they've been really receptive to Perl. With not too much time invested learning Perl, they can now attack systematically problems they were brute-forcing or doing by hand before. Why cycle error logs or mailbox archives manually when you can invest a few minutes making Perl do it for you?

    From my perspective, Perl is still the best at what Perl does.

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