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The CGI/PERL Cookbook

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Title: The CGI/PERL Cookbook
by Craig Patchett, Matthew Wright
ISBN: 0-471-16896-3
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Pub. Date: 14 October, 1997
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $54.99
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Average Customer Rating: 3.22 (55 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 4
Summary: Educational and always useful
Comment: This volume is not for the absolute beginner Perl programmer, nor is it for anyone who wants to just plug ready-written software into a web site.

If, however, you understand some Perl and are prepared to follow along with the explanations of the thousands of line of Perl in this book you will have a marvellous resource.

One of the authors, Matt Wright, is famous for his archive of free scripts written in Perl and the book builds on this material. It includes a CD-ROM with over 10,000 lines of Perl code that give you a large number of complete scripts and some useful subroutines. The book gives line by line explanations of all of this code.

I've used both snippets of code and complete CGI programs from this book as starting points for my own work many times. More than enough times to justify the cost of the book. Once you've worked through a few of the more complex examples you should improve your understanding of Perl and CGI enormously, I certainly did.

Some reviewers have mentioned that they thought the scripts were difficult to install or not enough effort was given to explaining the install process. I felt the opposite, I had little problem in getting the scripts to work and the problems I did have tended top be because of my lack of total understanding of CGI, web servers and Perl, solving them was an education in itself.

There is also a web site with corrected (yes, there are some typos and bugs) and upgraded copies of the examples and an email list for installing and modifying the examples, an excellent resource on top of the book. I would recommend this book to almost everyone.

Rating: 4
Summary: Be prepared for a Do It Yourself Experience...
Comment: I purchased this book in 1999 with the intention of developing my CGI skills and implement CGI programs in my website projects. The book does provide 20 usefull CGI scripts that one can fool around with, since there is a line by line explanation of all the scripts, I could figure out what makes it tick without having to actually learn perl.

On the Good Side:
1. Explanation of the scripts, line by line.
2. 20 Ready to use sripts and a few subroutines.
3. HTML Templates for using the scripts.
4. A website with updates and a forum.

On the Not so Good Side:
1. All the scripts are quite rudimentary, very basic operations.
2. You need to know how to configure the script to work in the server. This is where you will spend most of your time, yet little documentation on this subject is provided.
3. The website referred by the book is never updated.

Overall, I think it is a good book for someone who wants to jump into CGI for the first time, is tenacious, and is ready to invest a good amount of hours figuring things out on his own.

Rating: 1
Summary: There are errors and other complexities involved.
Comment: The programs are not really "ready-to-run." They are not "Ready-to-use." Programming is required, because there are bugs in html documents and scripts that must be corrected. The book is a good resource of information for people who want to study and learn and troubleshoot and learn Perl, because it is possible to get the scripts to work if the troubleshooter does not give up until they get things to work satisfactorily. I believe that it is practically impossible for a person to use these scripts without having some experience with Perl and CGI and HTML. The book has a lot of good explanations of code, which I find helpful and useful. I can't blame anyone for selling the book in the way it is sold. Salesmen sell the book. Programmers who successfully learn, don't give up when things don't work easily. This is book for beginning programmers.

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