| books.perl.org: Book: Embedding Perl in HTML with Mason | |||||||||
|
Perl Books
Books Categories Authors Publishers Best Rated Recent Releases Forthcoming Titles Online Books
You are not logged in. To rate or review you'll need an
account with auth.perl.org.
|
Embedding Perl in HTML with Mason (1st edition)Dave Rolsky and Ken Williams
Publisher's Page
Authors' Page Elsewhere on the 'netGoogleAll Consuming JungleScan ISBN.nu Buy fromAmazonPowells Amazon UK Bookpool Read onlineSafariFree Online Edition Online textContentsIndex Sample Chapter SupportErrata
Mason doesn't aim to be the one true Perl-based templating system for building web sites, but it's led many programmers to abandon their custom solutions when they've seen how much easier using Mason can be. It's a powerful, open source, Perl-based web site development and delivery engine, with features that make it an ideal backend for high load sites serving dynamic content. Mason uses a concept called components: a mix of HTML, Perl, and special Mason commands. These components can be entire web pages, or bits of HTML that can be embedded in top-level components. Shared and reusable, these components greatly simplify site maintenance: when you change a shared component, you instantly change all pages that refer to it.
Although using Mason isn't difficult, creating a Mason-based site can be tricky. /Embedding Perl in HTML with Mason/, written by members of Mason's core development team, shows you how to take advantage of Mason's strengths while avoiding the obstacles that inexperienced users may encounter. Mason's unique features, when used properly, can streamline the design of a web site or application. This concise book covers these features from several angles, and includes a study of the authors' sample site where these features are used.
/Embedding Perl in HTML with Mason/ shows you how to create large, complex, dynamically driven web sites that look good and are a snap to maintain. You'll learn how to visualize multiple Mason-based solutions to any given problem and select among them. The book covers the latest line of Mason development 1.1x, which has many new features, including line number reporting based on source files, sub-requests, and easier use as a CGI. The only book to cover this important tool, /Embedding Perl in HTML with Mason/ is essential reading for any Perl programmer who wants to simplify web site design. Learn how to use Mason, and you'll spend more time making things work, and less time reinventing the wheel.
Overall rating is 2.9 from 9 votes. If you were logged in you would be able to rate this book. |
||||||||
|
Comments to
Dave Rolsky at autarch@urth.org
Site Information and Contacts |
|||||||||
|
When you need perl, think perl.org
|
|