I've been thinking about learning Perl. Should I learn Perl5 or start with Perl6?
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Perl5. If you're willing to do all-new development and can wait N years until Perl 6 is actually out, you can learn Perl 6. But really, Perl5. edit to clarify: Rakudo Star, a
has recently garnered some attention, but it's not complete or final, and it's not really ready for deployment in a production environment. If you're looking for a new job in the next year or three, it's unlikely to help you get that job. Perhaps most importantly, if an enterprise is interested in Perl 6, chances are it's got some Perl 5 infrastructure too, and you would be better prepared to understand it by learning Perl 5 and its limitations first before you learn a significantly newer language like Perl 6. If you're just looking for "fun" you may indeed prefer Perl 6... or you may prefer the much more available Perl 5 and its wide variety of prepackaged modules available via CPAN. There is no release date for Perl 6. |
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Perl 5 if you want CPAN, Perl 5 if you want acceptable runtime performance, Perl 5 if you want stability and a language that's complete. Perl 6 if you want to play with the world's niftiest toy. Of course, they're not mutually incompatible -- I write Perl 5 for pay and for most of my "serious" open-source work, and Perl 6 for fun. But I've been writing Perl for long enough that I'm comfortable enough with Perl 5 to switch gears and write Perl 6 in my spare time. But for someone just starting out, of course you want to focus on just one language, and that language should be Perl 5 for most practical purposes. Perl 5 is not going to die anytime in the next 10 years, no matter how much success Perl 6 enjoys, and even though Perl 5 and Perl 6 are definitively different languages, still a lot of what you learn from Perl 5 will help you get started with Perl 6 if you choose to learn it in the future. |
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Here is a quote from the Perl6 webpage (emphasis is mine):
Perl5 is mature. Perl6 is in development. |
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I would recommend learning Perl5 before learning Perl6, for several reasons.
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Perl5 is still suggested for production code and has a large support community, though, as a testament to Perl6, if you encounter problems, it is more likely to be from new additions to the language, not those things that were in Perl5. Once Perl6 is "released", Larry Wall and others have created a translator, which will convert most (if not all) the Perl5 code into Perl6 syntax, if that helps in your decision. |
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