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The Lounge War Stories Why am I persistent to be WRONG! Post 302627903 by zxmaus on Sunday 22nd of April 2012 09:44:52 AM
Old 04-22-2012
What Neo said is very true and I have had that issue in several jobs. But there is always hope for us.

When I joined my current company 8 years ago, 'the team' did not logically exist. There were a few AIX boxes to take care of that nobody else wanted to bother with, in a company with a huge footprint in HP and Solaris and strict segregation of duties - so the role of an AIX SA had been created - and I was lucky enough to take it.

Since I was doing the alien work, nobody even wanted to bother trying to tell me what to do or even worse, manage me, so I had pretty much free hands in my duties and there was nobody to really compare me to Smilie
All I wanted was to deliver the best possible service to my clients - and I did not have to follow the standards, I actually made them Smilie

Over the years, the AIX footprint grew from 15 to several thousand systems, so the team grew, was splitted, grew again and was splitted again.
There were times where due to bad management we lost all teammembers except me, and there were times where everyone tried to join our team. I changed internally twice, countries and even the continent until I found the management I could and wanted to work for without repercussions for doing my job the way I think it should be done.

I cannot say that I am doing my job these days without struggles - I am fighting a lot with other teams and managers for doing 'the right thing' for the clients - but for me it is all worth it. I largely ignore politics and culture - I try to get them with common sense and reason - and many times I bend the rules to get things done despite all the red tape.

I try to educate rather than to argue. I convince with facts and largely ignore sentiments. I try to lead by example. I assist peer teams in solving issues. And after all these years I am naturally the person to go to for advice, or if things need to get done really fast. But most of all - and I think that is what makes the difference - I care about my systems and clients.

Most of the time, I get a lot of positive feedback from both peers and clients and occasionally even from management - and sometimes I am beaten up. I guess that is just how corporate life is. But I know from this experience, even in a big company, it is well possible to make a difference if you are determined enough and really want to drive a positive change.

Regards
zxmaus

Last edited by zxmaus; 04-22-2012 at 10:52 AM..
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Pod::Simple::PullParser(3pm)				 Perl Programmers Reference Guide			      Pod::Simple::PullParser(3pm)

NAME
Pod::Simple::PullParser -- a pull-parser interface to parsing Pod SYNOPSIS
my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( "whatever.pod" ); $parser->run; Or: my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( $some_filehandle_object ); $parser->run; Or: my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( $document_source ); $parser->run; Or: my $parser = SomePodProcessor->new; $parser->set_source( @document_lines ); $parser->run; And elsewhere: require 5; package SomePodProcessor; use strict; use base qw(Pod::Simple::PullParser); sub run { my $self = shift; Token: while(my $token = $self->get_token) { ...process each token... } } DESCRIPTION
This class is for using Pod::Simple to build a Pod processor -- but one that uses an interface based on a stream of token objects, instead of based on events. This is a subclass of Pod::Simple and inherits all its methods. A subclass of Pod::Simple::PullParser should define a "run" method that calls "$token = $parser->get_token" to pull tokens. See the source for Pod::Simple::RTF for an example of a formatter that uses Pod::Simple::PullParser. METHODS
my $token = $parser->get_token This returns the next token object (which will be of a subclass of Pod::Simple::PullParserToken), or undef if the parser-stream has hit the end of the document. $parser->unget_token( $token ) $parser->unget_token( $token1, $token2, ... ) This restores the token object(s) to the front of the parser stream. The source has to be set before you can parse anything. The lowest-level way is to call "set_source": $parser->set_source( $filename ) $parser->set_source( $filehandle_object ) $parser->set_source( $document_source ) $parser->set_source( @document_lines ) Or you can call these methods, which Pod::Simple::PullParser has defined to work just like Pod::Simple's same-named methods: $parser->parse_file(...) $parser->parse_string_document(...) $parser->filter(...) $parser->parse_from_file(...) For those to work, the Pod-processing subclass of Pod::Simple::PullParser has to have defined a $parser->run method -- so it is advised that all Pod::Simple::PullParser subclasses do so. See the Synopsis above, or the source for Pod::Simple::RTF. Authors of formatter subclasses might find these methods useful to call on a parser object that you haven't started pulling tokens from yet: my $title_string = $parser->get_title This tries to get the title string out of $parser, by getting some tokens, and scanning them for the title, and then ungetting them so that you can process the token-stream from the beginning. For example, suppose you have a document that starts out: =head1 NAME Hoo::Boy::Wowza -- Stuff B<wow> yeah! $parser->get_title on that document will return "Hoo::Boy::Wowza -- Stuff wow yeah!". If the document starts with: =head1 Name Hoo::Boy::W00t -- Stuff B<w00t> yeah! Then you'll need to pass the "nocase" option in order to recognize "Name": $parser->get_title(nocase => 1); In cases where get_title can't find the title, it will return empty-string (""). my $title_string = $parser->get_short_title This is just like get_title, except that it returns just the modulename, if the title seems to be of the form "SomeModuleName -- description". For example, suppose you have a document that starts out: =head1 NAME Hoo::Boy::Wowza -- Stuff B<wow> yeah! then $parser->get_short_title on that document will return "Hoo::Boy::Wowza". But if the document starts out: =head1 NAME Hooboy, stuff B<wow> yeah! then $parser->get_short_title on that document will return "Hooboy, stuff wow yeah!". If the document starts with: =head1 Name Hoo::Boy::W00t -- Stuff B<w00t> yeah! Then you'll need to pass the "nocase" option in order to recognize "Name": $parser->get_short_title(nocase => 1); If the title can't be found, then get_short_title returns empty-string (""). $author_name = $parser->get_author This works like get_title except that it returns the contents of the "=head1 AUTHOR Paragraph... " section, assuming that that section isn't terribly long. To recognize a "=head1 Author Paragraph " section, pass the "nocase" otpion: $parser->get_author(nocase => 1); (This method tolerates "AUTHORS" instead of "AUTHOR" too.) $description_name = $parser->get_description This works like get_title except that it returns the contents of the "=head1 DESCRIPTION Paragraph... " section, assuming that that section isn't terribly long. To recognize a "=head1 Description Paragraph " section, pass the "nocase" otpion: $parser->get_description(nocase => 1); $version_block = $parser->get_version This works like get_title except that it returns the contents of the "=head1 VERSION [BIG BLOCK] " block. Note that this does NOT return the module's $VERSION!! To recognize a "=head1 Version [BIG BLOCK] " section, pass the "nocase" otpion: $parser->get_version(nocase => 1); NOTE
You don't actually have to define a "run" method. If you're writing a Pod-formatter class, you should define a "run" just so that users can call "parse_file" etc, but you don't have to. And if you're not writing a formatter class, but are instead just writing a program that does something simple with a Pod::PullParser object (and not an object of a subclass), then there's no reason to bother subclassing to add a "run" method. SEE ALSO
Pod::Simple Pod::Simple::PullParserToken -- and its subclasses Pod::Simple::PullParserStartToken, Pod::Simple::PullParserTextToken, and Pod::Simple::PullParserEndToken. HTML::TokeParser, which inspired this. SUPPORT
Questions or discussion about POD and Pod::Simple should be sent to the pod-people@perl.org mail list. Send an empty email to pod-people-subscribe@perl.org to subscribe. This module is managed in an open GitHub repository, http://github.com/theory/pod-simple/ <http://github.com/theory/pod-simple/>. Feel free to fork and contribute, or to clone git://github.com/theory/pod-simple.git <git://github.com/theory/pod-simple.git> and send patches! Patches against Pod::Simple are welcome. Please send bug reports to <bug-pod-simple@rt.cpan.org>. COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMERS
Copyright (c) 2002 Sean M. Burke. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. AUTHOR
Pod::Simple was created by Sean M. Burke <sburke@cpan.org>. But don't bother him, he's retired. Pod::Simple is maintained by: o Allison Randal "allison@perl.org" o Hans Dieter Pearcey "hdp@cpan.org" o David E. Wheeler "dwheeler@cpan.org" perl v5.16.2 2012-10-25 Pod::Simple::PullParser(3pm)
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