

In larger codebases IMHO it would be really nice if I could get the types of data structures (for hashes - what keys are there? what are the types of the values? etc).įor my later carreer I'm learning other stuff I've been doing a bit of ruby, elixir and for the last 6 months I'm learning Haskell - just to diversify stuff a bit. What problem I'm having (sometimes) has to do with the fact that I'm using a dynamically typed languages.

I use Perl at work (mid/large codebase) and I'm only 25, so there are exceptions :) We use it on backend and we don't have any Perl specific problems at all. Are you interested in promoting your own content? STOP! Read this first.For posting job listings, please visit /r/forhire or /r/jobbit.Do you have something funny to share with fellow programmers? Please take it to /r/ProgrammerHumor/.

Do you have a question? Check out /r/learnprogramming, /r/cscareerquestions, or Stack Overflow.Direct links to app demos (unrelated to programming) will be removed.
#Write an online text adventure game in perl code
If there is no code in your link, it probably doesn't belong here.
