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Perl Weekly newsletter

A free, once a week e-mail round-up of hand-picked news and articles about Perl.

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Showing 501-550 of 727 entries
The post offers a clear and elegant walkthrough of solving two interesting problems using Raku. It stands out for its well-explained code, practical examples, and thoughtful use of language features like subsets, parsing, and bitwise operations.
Enjoy a quick recap of last week's contributions by Team PWC dealing with the "String Lie Detector" and "Subnet Sheriff" tasks in Perl and Raku. You will find plenty of solutions to keep you busy.
Welcome to a new week with a couple of fun tasks "Decrypt String" and "Goal Parser". If you are new to the weekly challenge then why not join us and have fun every week. For more information, please read the FAQ.
A meta-article about the series.
'We are pleased to announce version 42.1, the first maintenance release of version 42 of Perl 5.': Perldelta

Hi there!

While we are still low on articles we had a good start in the WhatsApp group I mentioned 2 weeks ago. People introduced themselves and there were some light conversations. You are welcome to join us and write a few words about yourself

This post delivers clean, one‑liner solutions in both Python and Perl for the Weekly Challenge 362 tasks, showing concise use of enumeration and string repetition for Echo Chamber and leveraging language‑specific libraries for Spellbound Sorting. Simon's …
This post delivers a clear and well‑explained exploration of The Weekly Challenge 362 tasks, walking through character‑duplication and spelled‑number sorting logic with readable examples. The author balances practical code with thoughtful commentary, offe…
This post presents well‑thought‑out Perl solutions to the Perl Weekly Challenge 362 problems with clear logic and use of idiomatic Perl constructs. The code is structured for readability and correctness, making it a valuable example for anyone exploring c…
This PWC 362 Part 2 post presents a clear and efficient Perl solution for sorting numbers by their spelled-out word forms using a classic Schwartzian Transform. The explanation shows thoughtful use of Lingua::Any::Numbers for multilingual support and high…
This Weekly Challenge 362 post offers a clean, beginner-friendly Perl implementation of the 'Echo Chamber' task, contrasting a straightforward loop approach with a more declarative map-and-join variant. The explanations highlight readable coding practices…
This challenge page from Peter presents the Perl Weekly Challenge 362 tasks with clear problem statements for both 'Echo Chamber' and 'Spellbound Sorting'. It provides a solid foundation for exploring string manipulation and sorting by word form, making i…
This write-up offers clear, practical multi-language solutions to the Perl Weekly Challenge 362 tasks, with nicely explained approaches in Raku, Perl, Python, and Elixir that make the logic easy to follow. Packy balances straightforward implementations wi…
This post gives a straightforward and well-structured Perl implementation for both parts of Perl Weekly Challenge 362, cleanly illustrating string expansion and English-word sorting logic. The code leverages familiar Perl idioms like map and split for cla…
This post delivers clear, idiomatic Perl solutions to both tasks of Perl Weekly Challenge 362, using expressive constructs like map‑based repetition for Echo Chamber and a well‑structured Schwartzian sort with language‑specific converters for Spellbound S…
This write-up on Perl Weekly Challenge 362: Lingua to the rescue! gives a clear and practical set of Perl and Raku solutions, especially for the 'Echo Chamber' string task using Raku's expressive constructs and Perl's repetition operator. The post balance…
This Week 362 post on Braincells.com presents clear, idiomatic Perl solutions to the 'Echo Chamber' and spell-sorting tasks, with concise logic leveraging Perl's core functions for string repetition and custom sorting. The explanations walk through the pr…
This write-up for PWC 362 gives a thoughtful and practical exploration of multiple Perl approaches to the 'Echo Chamber' string transformation problem. Bob clearly explains regex, list-mapping, and string-building techniques, offering insights into Perl's…
This post offers a clear and idiomatic Raku solution to the 'Echo Chamber' challenge, showcasing concise use of core language features like map, substr, and the repetition operator. The explanation is practical and easy to follow, making it a great exampl…
This blog post delivers clean, idiomatic Perl solutions to both parts of TWC 362, with clear logic in the echo_chamber looping and a well-structured number-to-words sorting implementation. The use of Perl's core functions keeps the code readable and effic…
Enjoy a quick recap of last week's contributions by Team PWC dealing with the "Echo Chamber" and "Spellbound Sorting" tasks in Perl and Raku. You will find plenty of solutions to keep you busy.
Welcome to a new week with a couple of fun tasks "String Lie Detector" and "Subnet Sheriff". If you are new to the weekly challenge then why not join us and have fun every week. For more information, please read the FAQ.
The latest release includes automatic mock data generation for transactional database interactions. That means it's much easier to capture and replay sequences that involve BEGIN WORK, COMMIT, ROLLBACK, and even nested try/catch logic.
Olaf Kolkman has had a long career in networking and Open Source that led him to be working on Internet Technology, Policy and Advocacy at the Internet Society. In September 2025, we had a long conversation with him. In this first part, we discussed his i…
David Cantrell's latest on automatic cross‑platform testing tackles the perennial challenge of running CI on 32‑bit environments using modern GitHub Actions, showing how to assemble a unified workflow across Unix‑like systems while handling 32‑bit builds.…
This post offers a timely, data‑driven benchmark of CPU performance versus cost across 7 major cloud providers and 44 VM families, using Perl‑based tooling for reproducible results. The concise summary and practical Docker‑ready benchmark suite make it a …
The Perl Foundation's board has put forward Chris Prather (perigrin) as a candidate for board membership, highlighting his decades of professional Perl experience and long‑standing community contributions. His vision emphasises strengthening the Foundatio…
The Perl & Raku Foundation has opened its call for presentations for TPRC 2026, inviting submissions of 20 or 50 minute talks on topics of interest to the Perl and Raku communities. Accepted speakers will receive complimentary conference tickets, with ses…

Hi there,

If there's one thing that keeps impressing me in our community, it's the dedication of people like Olaf Alders. Week after week, Olaf keeps refining MetaCPAN, polishing small details and improving the user experience.

The post delivers clear, well‑structured Python (with Perl) implementations for both the Zeckendorf representation and celebrity detection tasks, showcasing thoughtful logic and solid error handling. The explanations and example inputs/outputs make the so…
The post offers a clear, language-agnostic walk through both challenge tasks, computing the Zeckendorf representation and finding a celebrity in a matrix, with working code in several languages and readable explanations of the greedy Fibonacci strategy an…
The Perl solutions for the challenge combine clear logic with well-commented, idiomatic code that makes both the Zeckendorf representation and celebrity detection easy to follow. The step-by-step explanations and practical test cases offer a solid, educat…
The celebrity finder solution delivers a clear and self-contained Perl implementation that uses readable grep-based checks to identify the celebrity by row and column conditions, backed by several solid test cases illustrating correctness. Its straightfor…
The write-up presents a memory-efficient and well-explained Perl implementation for computing the Zeckendorf representation, cleverly using only two Fibonacci values at a time and clear test examples to illustrate the logic. Its structured presentation an…
The Challenge 361 post clearly states the two tasks - computing the Zeckendorf representation of a number and finding a celebrity in a matrix, along with illustrative examples that make the problem definitions easy to grasp. Its structured presentation of…
The write-up delivers clear and well-structured multi-language solutions for both the Zeckendorf representation and the celebrity detection tasks, with thoughtful explanations of the greedy algorithm and candidate evaluation. The step-by-step approach and…
The post offers solid, well-commented Perl implementations for both TWC361 tasks, clearly expressing the logic behind Zeckendorf decomposition and celebrity detection. The structured approach and readable code make it a valuable example for anyone explori…
The post delivers clear and practical Perl implementations for both the Zeckendorf representation and the celebrity detection problems, with complete working scripts and illustrative example outputs. Its well‑organised explanations and real usage examples…
The write-up presents clear and well-structured Raku solutions for both the Zeckendorf sequence and the celebrity problem, with straightforward logic that's easy to follow and learn from. The use of idiomatic Raku constructs and explanatory comments makes…
The post showcases a clean and thoughtful Raku solution to computing Zeckendorf representations, demonstrating idiomatic use of sequences and recursion in the language. It's both well-structured and easy to follow, making it a valuable reference for Raku …
23 Feb
The blog post presents clear and idiomatic Perl solutions for both the Zeckendorf representation and the celebrity problem, showcasing practical logic and efficient algorithmic style. The code is easy to follow and well-structured, making it a great examp…
Enjoy a quick recap of last week's contributions by Team PWC dealing with the "Zeckendorf Representation" and "Find Celebrity" tasks in Perl and Raku. You will find plenty of solutions to keep you busy.
Welcome to a new week with a couple of fun tasks "Echo Chamber" and "Spellbound Sorting". If you are new to the weekly challenge then why not join us and have fun every week. For more information, please read the FAQ.
A detailed example with explanation and use-case.
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