![]() |
Prior to Mac OS X, Perl scripters were forced to telnet to a shell prompt on a remote Unix box to get full access to their favorite language. But now, with its BSD underpinnings and a terminal window, Mac OS X has the same version of Perl you’d find on any Unix system. Of course, Apple’s own scripting language, AppleScript, has been around for years. And a recent release of the language added the ability to use SOAP services, which makes it a nice complement to Perl. Business - List of business/finance/loan/mortgage resources Computers - List of computer hardware/software/peripheral resources Internet - List of webhosting/webdesign/internet marketing resources Software - List of software resources Web Design - List of web design/development resources Web Hosting - List of web hosting resources Web Promotion - List of search engine optimization/internet marketing resources Web Resources - List of other web resources Recreation - List of travel/hotel/cruise resources Casino - List of online gambling/poker/blackjack/roulette resources Health - List of online pharmacy/hospital/health resources Shopping - List of online shopping/gift resources Miscellaneous - List of all other resources not stated above A Perl-built SOAP web service also has full access to the Mac OS X platform from the Unix perspective and can make use of the thousands of pre-written routines from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). In fact, a SOAP web service in Perl can even use other SOAP web services to repackage, filter, or summarize data.
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| © Copyright 2006, pcbusiness.org |