We have asked UNIX.com users over the years what is their favorite editor and why. Here is the top three answers.
Here is a new YT video on this question:
What Editor Does Everyone Use?
https://youtu.be/gqE8RTZZt9g
Of course, vi was the overwhelming favorite.
Credits:
1080 HD... (3 Replies)
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https://youtu.be/doa9sA6q9Uw
With so many great flavors of Linux to choose from, we asked our UNIX.com members what is their favorite Linux distro and why.
Here are the results:
What is your favorite Linux distro?
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I can bet everyone has their one favorite book even though we have had read many books on UNIX or Linux. My all time favorite is "Unix Power Tools". This book always made me geeky and I loved the little tricks/tips in the book. I still do!
The next favorite would be "Prentice Hall Unix and Linux... (0 Replies)
I am curious about the most popular ssh client on Windows environment. Talking about me, I use PuTTY most of the time coupled with WinSCP to transfer files. But, I like Tera Term too. It has great drag-drop feature where you can drag a file/folder and drop on the window and it will transfer the... (14 Replies)
How to post a new thread (Regarding Unix related doubts) in Unix Forums.
I registered my id but I am unable to post my Questions to Forum.
Thanks & Regards,
indusri (1 Reply)
XML::RSS::Headline(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation XML::RSS::Headline(3pm)NAME
XML::RSS::Headline - Persistant XML RSS Encapsulation
VERSION
2.2
SYNOPSIS
Headline object to encapsulate the headline/URL combination of a RSS feed. It provides a unique id either by way of the URL or by doing an
MD5 checksum on the headline (when URL uniqueness fails).
CONSTRUCTOR
XML::RSS::Headline->new( headline => $headline, url => $url )
XML::RSS::Headline->new( item => $item )
A XML::RSS::Headline object can be initialized either with headline/url or with a parse XML::RSS item structure. The argument 'head-
line_as_id' is optional and takes a boolean as its value.
METHODS
$headline->id
The id is our unique identifier for a headline/url combination. Its how we can keep track of which headlines we have seen before and which
ones are new. The id is either the URL or a MD5 checksum generated from the headline text (if $headline->headline_as_id is true);
$headline->multiline_headline
This method returns the headline as either an array or array reference based on context. It splits headline on newline characters into the
array.
$headline->item( $item )
Init the object for a parsed RSS item returned by XML::RSS.
$headline->set_first_seen
$headline->set_first_seen( Time::HiRes::time() )
Set the time of when the headline was first seen. If you pass in a value it will be used otherwise calls Time::HiRes::time().
$headline->first_seen
The time (in epoch seconds) of when the headline was first seen.
$headline->first_seen_hires
The time (in epoch seconds and milliseconds) of when the headline was first seen.
GET /SET ACCESSOR METHODS
$headline->headline
$headline->headline( $headline )
The rss headline/title. HTML::Entities::decode_entities is used when the headline is set. (not sure why XML::RSS doesn't do this)
$headline->url
$headline->url( $url )
The rss link/url. URI->canonical is called to attempt to normalize the URL
$headline->description
$headline->description( $description )
The description of the RSS headline.
$headline->headline_as_id
$headline->headline_as_id( $bool )
A bool value that determines whether the URL will be the unique identifier or the if an MD5 checksum of the RSS title will be used instead.
(when the URL doesn't provide absolute uniqueness or changes within the RSS feed)
This is used in extreme cases when URLs aren't always unique to new healines (Use Perl Journals) and when URLs change within a RSS feed
(www.debianplanet.org / debianplanet.org / search.cpan.org,search.cpan.org:80)
$headline->timestamp
$headline->timestamp( Time::HiRes::time() )
A high resolution timestamp that is set using Time::HiRes::time() when the object is created.
AUTHOR
Jeff Bisbee, "<jbisbee at cpan.org>"
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-xml-rss-feed at rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=XML-RSS-Feed>. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress
on your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc XML::RSS::Headline
You can also look for information at:
* AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
<http://annocpan.org/dist/XML-RSS-Feed>
* CPAN Ratings
<http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/XML-RSS-Feed>
* RT: CPAN's request tracker
<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=XML-RSS-Feed>
* Search CPAN
<http://search.cpan.org/dist/XML-RSS-Feed>
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Special thanks to Rocco Caputo, Martijn van Beers, Sean Burke, Prakash Kailasa and Randal Schwartz for their help, guidance, patience, and
bug reports. Guys thanks for actually taking time to use the code and give good, honest feedback.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2006 Jeff Bisbee, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
XML::RSS::Feed, XML::RSS::Headline::PerlJobs, XML::RSS::Headline::Fark, XML::RSS::Headline::UsePerlJournals, POE::Component::RSSAggregator
perl v5.8.8 2006-07-17 XML::RSS::Headline(3pm)