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Full Discussion: Who would you employ?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Who would you employ? Post 302952965 by wisecracker on Monday 24th of August 2015 03:19:28 PM
Old 08-24-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by jgt
Attitude and aptitude.
Everything else you can teach.
Most importantly, do you want to come back after two or three months and work as a highly paid consultant? Smilie
LOL!

I am happy being an amateur, once I am retired in October I do not intend to carry on in my profession, ([RF] Electronics Engineer).

I do intend to keep my mind alert coding as I really enjoy it and it is now my hobby of choice along with UNIX shell scripting. I have all but abandoned the other languages I have learnt.

As I am a licneced Amateur Radio callsign holder, I think I would prefer another Amateur Radio callsign holder to take my place as they are already interested in the subject and have also probably had practical experience in correcting their failures, building one-offs, testing, etc...

Raw qualifications are not my prime mover...
 

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Tangram::Expr(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Tangram::Expr(3pm)

NAME
Tangram::Expr - represent expressions on database server side SYNOPSIS
my ($r1, $r2) = $storage->remote(qw( ... )); $r1->{field} operator $value $r1->{field} operator $r2->{field2} $r1->{collection}->includes( $obj ) $r1->{collection}->exists( $obj, $filter ) $r1->{collection}->includes_or( $obj1, $obj2, ... ) DESCRIPTION
Tangram::Expr objects represent expressions that will be evaluated on the database server side. Expression objects fall into one of the following categories: numeric, string, reference or collection. Many of the methods in Expr are needed only by people extending Tangram. See also Tangram::Relational, and the source the Tangram::mysql and Tangram::Sybase for examples on how these functions are intercepted to allow RDBMS-specific expressions. NUMERIC EXPRESSIONS
Numeric expression objects can be compared using the operators ==, !=, <, >, <= and >=. The other operand must be either another numeric expression object, or a normal Perl numeric value. The result of the comparison is a Filter. STRING EXPRESSIONS
String expression objects can be compared using the operators eq, ne, lt, gt, le, and ge. The other operand must be either a string expression object or any Perl scalar value. Tangram will automatically quote the operand as required by the SQL syntax. The result of the comparison is a Tangram::Expr::Filter. String expression objects also support the method like($str), where $str is a string that may contain SQL wildcards. The result is a Tan- gram::Expr::Filter that translates to a SQL "LIKE $str" predicate. REFERENCE EXPRESSIONS
Reference expression objects can be compared for equality using operators == and !=. The other operand must be another reference expres- sion, a persistent object or undef(). The result of the comparison is a Filter. COLLECTION EXPRESSIONS
Collection expression objects represents a collection inside an object. It supports the includes() and exists() methods, which returns a Tangram::Expr::Filter stating that the collection must contain the operand. exists() uses a subselect. It also supports the includes_or() methods, which accepts a list and is performs a logical OR - using the IN (x,y,z) SQL construct. The operand may be a Tangram::Remote, a persistent object, or an object ID. operator < is provided as a synonym for includes(). The includes() method can be used for all collection types (Set, Array, Hash, and the Intr* versions). PREDICATES
Predicate objects represent logical expressions, or conditions. Predicates support logical operators &, | and !. Note that a single amper- sand or vertical bar must be used (this is a Perl limitation). The result is another predicate. CLASS METHODS
new($type, $expr, @remotes) Returns a new instance. $type is a Type object corresponding to this expression (see Tangram::Type). $expr is a SQL expression. It will eventually become part of a WHERE-CLAUSE. @remotes contains the Remote objects (see Tangram::Remote) that participate in the expression. Tangram uses this list to insert the corre- sponding tables in the FROM clause and conditions in the WHERE-CLAUSE. INSTANCE METHODS
expr() Returns the SQL equivalent for this expression. type() Returns the Type (see Tangram::Type) corresponding to this expression. objects() Returns the list of the objects that participate in this expression. storage() Returns the Storage associated with this expression. EXAMPLES
$person is called 'Homer' $person->{name} eq 'Homer' $person's name ends with 'mer' $person->{name}->like('%mer'); $person is older than 35 $person->{age} > 35 $person is married to $homer $person->{partner} == $homer $person is not $homer $person != $homer $person is not $homer and is older than 65 $person != $homer & $person->{age} > 65 $person is $bart's parent $person->{children}->includes( $bart ) $person->{children} < $bart $person is not $bart's parent !$person->{children}->includes( $bart ) !($person->{children} < $bart) $person is one of the local list of people, @person $person->in(@person) SEE ALSO
Tangram::Remote, Tangram::Expr, Tangram::Storage perl v5.8.8 2006-03-29 Tangram::Expr(3pm)
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