07-23-2006
Quote:
Desi students/professionals you might understand my situation better..
I assume you are from India and I think you are aware of the competetion in IT in your part of the world. Its very difficult to survive with IT career without any solid background. And you should also be aware that as Chemical Engineer you have a very good future ahead, so I'll suggest you to focus on your career as Chemical Engineer since you have done your hardwork in this field, suppose you go for this offered job, what will happen after 2, 3 years, will you still be able to get a job as Chemical Engineer in the market? You have more chances to get job as fresh graduate not as a hybrid professional.
Regards,
Tayyab
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
aspect::advice
Aspect::Advice(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Aspect::Advice(3pm)
NAME
Aspect::Advice - Change how Perl code is run at a pointcut
SYNOPSIS
# Trace calls to all functions in all MyAccount classes
use Aspect;
before {
print 'Called: '. $_->sub_name;
} call qw/^MyAccount::/;
# Repeat using the pure object-oriented interface
use Aspect::Advice::Before ();
use Aspect::Pointcut::Call ();
my $advice = Aspect::Advice::Before->new(
pointcut => Aspect::Pointcut::Call->new( qr/^MyAccount::/ ),
code => sub {
print 'called: '. $_->sub_name;
},
);
DESCRIPTION
An "advice" in AOP lingo is composed of a condition (known as a Aspect::Pointcut) and some code that will run when that pointcut is true.
This code is run before, after, or around the target pointcut depending on the particular advice type declaration used.
You do not normally create advice using the constructor. By "use()"ing Aspect, you get five advice declaration subroutines imported.
"before" is used to indicate code that should run prior to the function being called. See Aspect::Advice::Before for more information.
"after" is used to indicate code that should run following the function being called, regardless of whether it returns normally or throws
an exception. See Aspect::Advice::After for more information.
"around" is used to take deeper control of the call and gives you your own lexical scope between the caller and callee, with a specific
"proceed" call required in your code to execute the target function. See Aspect::Advice::Around for more information.
When the advice code is called, it is provided with an Advice::Point object which describes the context of the call to the target function,
and allows you to change it.
This parameter is provided both via the topic variable $_ (since version 0.90) and additionally as the first parameter to the advice code
(which may be deprecated at some point in the future).
If you are creating "advice" objects directly via the OO interface, you should never use this class directly but instead use the class of
the particular type of advice you want to create.
AUTHORS
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>
Marcel Gruenauer <marcel@cpan.org>
Ran Eilam <eilara@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001 by Marcel Gruenauer
Some parts copyright 2009 - 2012 Adam Kennedy.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-02-01 Aspect::Advice(3pm)