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Full Discussion: anyone here uses an iPhone ?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? anyone here uses an iPhone ? Post 302188577 by sparcguy on Thursday 24th of April 2008 01:17:45 AM
Old 04-24-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perderabo
My company wants me to have a Blackberry and they provide it at no cost to me. It's pretty cool because it allows access to my company's email. It has a full keyboard and I can type on it... but not super fast. I heard that those iPhones don't have a keyboard. That piece of info is all I need to know. No iPhone for me... I don't want one. If they ever figure out might like to be able to enter some data maybe I'll take a look at them.
yeah it looks cool having a blackberry and all, but I feel that's really nothing more than a trick to get you to do 24/7 support why else would they give you one then?

With a blackberry you can do a lot of things besides checking email you can also surf internet that means with the keyboard you can do telnet so there is no more excuse to say you have no access or claim inconvienience.

So when you watching movie with your gf or just abt to have a "close encounter" *ring ..ring* whoops sorry honey gotta go to work. Smilie
 

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File::Find::Rule::Extending(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			    File::Find::Rule::Extending(3)

NAME
File::Find::Rule::Extending - the mini-guide to extending File::Find::Rule SYNOPSIS
package File::Find::Rule::Random; use strict; # take useful things from File::Find::Rule use base 'File::Find::Rule'; # and force our crack into the main namespace sub File::Find::Rule::random () { my $self = shift()->_force_object; $self->exec( sub { rand > 0.5 } ); } 1; DESCRIPTION
File::Find::Rule went down so well with the buying public that everyone wanted to add extra features. With the 0.07 release this became a possibility, using the following conventions. Declare your package package File::Find::Rule::Random; use strict; Inherit methods from File::Find::Rule # take useful things from File::Find::Rule use base 'File::Find::Rule'; Force your madness into the main package # and force our crack into the main namespace sub File::Find::Rule::random () { my $self = shift()->_force_object; $self->exec( sub { rand > 0.5 } ); } Yes, we're being very cavalier here and defining things into the main File::Find::Rule namespace. This is due to lack of imaginiation on my part - I simply can't find a way for the functional and oo interface to work without doing this or some kind of inheritance, and inheritance stops you using two File::Find::Rule::Foo modules together. For this reason try and pick distinct names for your extensions. If this becomes a problem then I may institute a semi-official registry of taken names. Taking no arguments. Note the null prototype on random. This is a cheat for the procedural interface to know that your sub takes no arguments, and so allows this to happen: find( random => in => '.' ); If you hadn't declared "random" with a null prototype it would have consumed "in" as a parameter to it, then got all confused as it doesn't know about a '.' rule. AUTHOR
Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2002 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
File::Find::Rule File::Find::Rule::MMagic was the first extension module, so maybe check that out. perl v5.18.2 2011-09-19 File::Find::Rule::Extending(3)
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