Offline Documentation
If you’d like to learn more about Perl, here are some related publications that we recommend:
Perl 5 Pocket Reference, by Johan Vromans; O’Reilly Media (5th Edition, July 2011). This small booklet serves as a convenient quick-reference for Perl.
Perl Cookbook, by Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington; O’Reilly Media (2nd Edition, August 2003). This is the companion volume to the book you have in your hands right now. This cookbook’s recipes teach you how to cook with Perl.
Learning Perl, by Randal Schwartz, brian d foy, and Tom Phoenix; O’Reilly Media (6th Edition, June 2011). This book teaches programmers the 30% of basic Perl they’ll use 70% of the time, and it is targeted at people writing self-contained programs around a couple of hundred lines.
Intermediate Perl, by Randal Schwartz, brian d foy, and Tom Phoenix; O’Reilly Media (March 2006). This book picks up where Learning Perl left off, introducing references, data structures, packages, objects, and modules.
Mastering Perl, by brian d foy; O’Reilly Media (July 2007). This book is the final book in the trilogy along with Learning Perl and Intermediate Perl. Instead of focusing on language fundamentals, it shifts gears to teaching the Perl programmer about applying Perl to the work at hand.
Modern Perl, by chromatic; Oynx Neon (October 2010). This book provides a survey of modern Perl programming practice and topics, suitable for people who know programming already but haven’t paid attention to recent developments ...
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