Posted by Yanick Champoux on Oct 8, 2009
picture by Geophaps
Hey, that one in the sixth row…
Doesn’t he looks familiar?
So there I am, on my morning bus ride, reading my copy of The Definitive Guide to Catalyst (keep your eyes peeled for the upcoming review of the book in the Perl Review).
I’m near the end, in Chapter 11, Catalyst Cookbook. As it is with most tech books, the last chapters are the most engrossing, as the gloves finally come of and the writers throw at you all the wonderful, mind-bending stuff that the rest of the book prepares you for.
The section I’m at is about the development process. Specifically, it shows how you can put hooks in your versioning system to automatically screen commits to conform to Perl::Critic and Perl::Tidy policies. The given example script uses Git, which is just dandy with me as it is my current VCS of choice. But there’s something . . . funny about that script. The way the utility functions are stashed at the end after a
### utility functions ##############################
line. The choice of variable names. The comments. It all feels oddly familiar. Read the rest of this entry . . .
Posted by Sheeri Cabral on May 11, 2009
A year ago, the outline was being written. A lot of work was crammed into the intervening months, and I am happy and proud to announce that the MySQL Administrator’s Bible has been published, and is sitting on the shelf at many major booksellers already. The official publication date is today — Monday, May 11th, 2009 — although some stores have had copies for a week, including Amazon.com.
The MySQL Administrator’s Bible, published by Wiley Press (available on Amazon.com at http://www.amazon.com/MySQL-Administrators-Bible-Sheeri-Cabral/dp/0470416912/, fully covers how to administer MySQL 5.1. It is suitable for people new to MySQL, although as an experienced MySQL DBA I can say that I learned a lot while researching and writing this book, and I believe that even veteran DBAs can learn from this book.
This book for anyone who wants to learn how to use and administer MySQL. Unlike other beginning books, however, it will appeal to DBAs who are experienced in other database systems such as Oracle, Postgres, Microsoft SQL Server, DB2, Sybase, Firebird. For example, the book contains a chapter on how MySQL’s SQL is different from the SQL standard. Basic SQL has been added as a feature of the companion website, so that those who do not know how to form a query can learn, but those who are well versed in SQL do not feel they have wasted money buying a book where they already know some of the material in it.
The detailed table of contents can be viewed or downloaded as a PDF. Or, if scanning the index is your cup of tea, it is also available as a PDF. The cover price is $49.99, but Amazon.com is selling it for $31.49.