https://www.slideshare.net/perlcareers/get-paid-more-the-anatomy-of-a-technical-hiring-process
]]>prove -s -j 5 -r --source Feature --feature-option extensions=.feature --ext=.feature examples/
and any suggestions on how to make that a little easier gratefully received.
]]>XML::Writer seems like a reasonable solution, but I’m not OK with writing a static header by using 300 calls to $writer->startTag(‘blah’).
This seems a good job for the computer; specifically for a SAX parser which will happily parse non-balanced XML. Anyway, the result is:
my $writer = XML::Writer::Lazy->new( OUTPUT => 'self');
my $title = "My Title!";
$writer->lazily(<<"XML");
<html>
<head>
<title>$title</title>
</head>
<body>
<p>Pipe in literal XML</p>
XML
$writer->startTag( "p", "class" => "simple" );
$writer->characters("Alongside the usual interface");
$writer->characters("123456789");
$writer->lazily("</p></body></html>");
https://metacpan.org/pod/XML::Writer::Lazy
Which is considerably lazier, and allows you to intersperse actual XML::Writer commands with chunks of XML string and have it do largely the right thing.
]]>http://www.writemoretests.com/2016/07/perl-python-and-ruby-the-anatomy-of-a-testing-assertion.html
]]>I'm pleased to be sponsoring again this year as http://perl.careers/, but a reminder that the deadline for talks is end of this week, Friday the 6th of November!
If you'll just be attending but not speaking, by signing up early you'll make sure there's enough coffee and beer for you...
]]>How to write a Developer CV/Résumé that will get you hired.