Reddit Reddit reviews The Definitive Guide to Catalyst: Writing Extensible, Scalable and Maintainable Perl-Based Web Applications

We found 2 Reddit comments about The Definitive Guide to Catalyst: Writing Extensible, Scalable and Maintainable Perl-Based Web Applications. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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The Definitive Guide to Catalyst: Writing Extensible, Scalable and Maintainable Perl-Based Web Applications
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2 Reddit comments about The Definitive Guide to Catalyst: Writing Extensible, Scalable and Maintainable Perl-Based Web Applications:

u/smellycoat · 10 pointsr/perl

Well, there's this (PDF), but it's kinda old. It doesn't cover chained actions, and probably a coupla other things. (Chained actions are covered nicely here).

Catalyst::Manual::Cookbook is absolutely worth a look, as well, as is the rest of Catalyst::Manual. The wiki is chock-full of interesting stuff, too.

The Definitive guide (UK) (That's an EPO affil link, not mine) is actually a very good book, with some great examples for newbies and tons of handy snippets for those with more experience.

Day to day, the only references I use a lot are Catalyst::Request and Catalyst::Response.

Oh, and, lurking in the IRC channel (irc.perl.org, #catalyst) is very helpful.

But, I'm afraid I don't know of any other cheat-sheets. I hope that's helpful anyway, man.

u/dandv · 3 pointsr/programming

> What if I go to the trouble of publishing a book through Lulu about Tiling Windows managers, taking care to ensure that dwm is the subject of at least one chapter. Would it then be notable?

That's what made the MojoMojo article kept: we published a chapter in a book on the software it's powered by, Catalyst.