I've got a wildcard cert of my own, and I thought of setting up an HTTPS proxy to blogs.perl.org. But I'm not sure if that is ethical or prudent.
]]>#!/usr/bin/perl system cat => "/etc/passwd";
… and it works. Makes me wonder how secure this system is.
]]>/^=\w+/ .. /^=cut\s*$/
), all lines that are solely comments ( /^\s*#/
), anything after __DATA__
or __END__
, and, if possible, anything inside a string ("..."
, '...'
, <<END_STRING
, qq
, q
, ...).
The analysis code should also count the lines that start with any of the following conditions:
/^\S+/
/^\t+\S+
/^[ ]+\S+/
)/^\t+[ ]+\S+/
)/^[ \t]*[ ]+\t+\S+/
)Since the days PC computers got more than 640K of disk space on a floppy it has stopped to be an issue.
In the good old days of 64k many of old farts would argue for 'tabs' as the took only 8 bits of less memory than while '4 spaces' took up 32.
In the big scope of things it really doesn't matter much
I registered and login it now.
Can I register my Perl problem from Web Interface?
The solution that you have entered does not work as expected. See the PerlBanjo link above for errors.
]]>>If you are asking about the interface to add new problems to the system, there is no such interface.
I understand current SquarePerl.com features now.
I feel if a problem is added from web form, and answers are also added from web form, it will become interactive communication by a teacher and students.