PERL
(Practical Extraction and Reporting Language)
Perl (Practical Extraction and Reporting Language) is
a script programming language that is similar in syntax
to the C language and that includes a number of popular
UNIX facilities such as SED, awk, and tr. Perl is an interpreted
language that can optionally be compiled just before execution
into either C code or cross-platform bytecode. When compiled,
a Perl program is almost (but not quite) as fast as a fully
precompiled C language program. Perl is regarded as a good
choice for developing common gateway interface (CGI) programs
because it has good text manipulation facilities (although
it also handles binary files). It was invented by Larry
Wall.
In general, Perl is easier to learn and faster to code in
than the more structured C and C++ languages. Perl programs
can, however, be quite sophisticated. Perl tends to have
devoted adherents. plug-ins can be installed for some servers
(Apache, for example) so that Perl is loaded permanently
in memory, thus reducing compile time and resulting in faster
execution of CGI Perl scripts.
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