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1 =head1 NAME 2 3 perlcommunity - a brief overview of the Perl community 4 5 =head1 DESCRIPTION 6 7 This document aims to provide an overview of the vast perl community, which is 8 far too large and diverse to provide a detailed listing. If any specific niche 9 has been forgotten, it is not meant as an insult but an omission for the sake 10 of brevity. 11 12 The Perl community is as diverse as Perl, and there is a large amount of 13 evidence that the Perl users apply TMTOWTDI to all endeavors, not just 14 programming. From websites, to IRC, to mailing lists, there is more than one 15 way to get involved in the community. 16 17 =head2 Where to find the community 18 19 There is a central directory for the Perl community: L<http://perl.org> 20 maintained by the Perl Foundation (L<http://www.perlfoundation.org/>), 21 which tracks and provides services for a variety of other community sites. 22 23 =head2 Mailing lists and Newsgroups 24 25 Perl runs on e-mail, there is no doubt about it. The Camel book was originally 26 written mostly over e-mail and today Perl's development is co-ordinated through 27 mailing lists. The largest repository of Perl mailing lists is located at 28 L<http://lists.perl.org>. 29 30 Most Perl-related projects set up mailing lists for both users and 31 contributors. If you don't see a certain project listed at 32 L<http://lists.perl.org>, check the particular website for that project. 33 Most mailing lists are archived at L<http://nntp.perl.org/>. 34 35 There are also plenty of Perl related newsgroups located under 36 C<comp.lang.perl.*>. 37 38 =head2 IRC 39 40 The Perl community has a rather large IRC presence. For starters, it has its 41 own IRC network, L<irc://irc.perl.org>. General (not help-oriented) chat can be 42 found at L<irc://irc.perl.org/#perl>. Many other more specific chats are also 43 hosted on the network. Information about irc.perl.org is located on the 44 network's website: L<http://www.irc.perl.org>. For a more help oriented #perl, 45 check out L<irc://irc.freenode.net/#perl>. Perl 6 development also has a 46 presence in L<irc://irc.freenode.net/#perl6>. Most Perl-related channels will 47 be kind enough to point you in the right direction if you ask nicely. 48 49 Any large IRC network (Dalnet, EFnet) is also likely to have a #perl channel, 50 with varying activity levels. 51 52 =head2 Websites 53 54 Perl websites come in a variety of forms, but they fit into two large 55 categories: forums and news websites. There are many Perl related 56 websites, so only a few of the community's largest are mentioned here. 57 58 =head3 News sites 59 60 =over 4 61 62 =item L<http://perl.com/> 63 64 Run by O'Reilly Media (The publisher of L<the Camel Book|perlbook> among other 65 Perl-related literature), perl.com provides current Perl news, articles, and 66 resources for Perl developers as well as a directory of other useful websites. 67 68 =item L<http://use.perl.org/> 69 70 use Perl; provides a slashdot-style Perl news website covering all things Perl, 71 from minutes of the meetings of the Perl 6 Design team to conference 72 announcements with (ir)relevant discussion. 73 74 =back 75 76 =head3 Forums 77 78 =over 4 79 80 =item L<http://www.perlmonks.org/> 81 82 PerlMonks is one of the largest Perl forums, and describes itself as "A place 83 for individuals to polish, improve, and showcase their Perl skills." and "A 84 community which allows everyone to grow and learn from each other." 85 86 =back 87 88 =head2 User Groups 89 90 Many cities around the world have local PerlMongers chapters. A PerlMongers 91 chapter is a local user group which typically holds regular in-person meetings, 92 both social and technical; helps organize local conferences, workshops, and 93 hackathons; and provides a mailing list or other continual contact method for 94 its members to keep in touch. 95 96 To find your local PerlMongers (or PM as they're commonly abbreviated) group 97 check the international PerlMongers directory at L<http://www.pm.org/>. 98 99 =head2 Workshops 100 101 Perl workshops are, as the name might suggest, workshops where Perl is taught 102 in a variety of ways. At the workshops, subjects range from a beginner's 103 introduction (such as the Pittsburgh Perl Workshop's "Zero To Perl") to much 104 more advanced subjects. 105 106 There are several great resources for locating workshops: the 107 L<websites|"Websites"> mentioned above, the 108 L<calendar|"Calendar of Perl Events"> mentioned below, and the YAPC Europe 109 website, L<http://www.yapceurope.org/>, which is probably the best resource for 110 European Perl events. 111 112 =head2 Hackathons 113 114 Hackathons are a very different kind of gathering where Perl hackers gather to 115 do just that, hack nonstop for an extended (several day) period on a specific 116 project or projects. Information about hackathons can be located in the same 117 place as information about L<workshops|"Workshops"> as well as in 118 L<irc://irc.perl.org/#perl>. 119 120 If you have never been to a hackathon, here are a few basic things you need to 121 know before attending: have a working laptop and know how to use it; check out 122 the involved projects before hand; have the necessary version control client; 123 and bring backup equipment (an extra LAN cable, additional power strips, etc.) 124 because someone will forget. 125 126 =head2 Conventions 127 128 Perl has two major annual conventions: The Perl Conference (now part of OSCON), 129 put on by O'Reilly, and Yet Another Perl Conference or YAPC (pronounced 130 yap-see), which is localized into several regional YAPCs (North America, 131 Europe, Asia) in a stunning grassroots display by the Perl community. For more 132 information about either conference, check out their respective web pages: 133 OSCON L<http://conferences.oreillynet.com/>; YAPC L<http://www.yapc.org>. 134 135 A relatively new conference franchize with a large Perl portion is the 136 Open Source Developers Conference or OSDC. First held in Australia it has 137 recently also spread to Israel. More information can be found at: 138 L<http://www.osdc.com.au/> for Australia, and L<http://www.osdc.org.il> 139 for Israel. 140 141 =head2 Calendar of Perl Events 142 143 The Perl Foundation maintains a website and Google calendar for tracking 144 Workshops, Hackathons, Perl Mongers meetings, and the larger conventions 145 mentioned above. The web page is located at 146 L<http://www.perl.org/events.html>; the Google calendar is named 147 I<Perl Events>. Disclaimer: not every Perl Mongers group is on that calendar, 148 so don't lose heart if you don't see yours posted. Read the section above 149 on L<"User Groups"> to find yours. 150 151 =head1 AUTHOR 152 153 Edgar "Trizor" Bering <trizor@gmail.com> 154 155 =cut
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