Difference between revisions of "PERL/C2/Comments-in-Perl/English-timed"
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Revision as of 11:25, 15 April 2013
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00.00 | Welcome to the spoken tutorial on Comments in Perl. |
00.05 | In this tutorial, we will learn about |
00.08 | Comments in Perl |
00.10 | I am using Ubuntu Linux12.04 operating system and Perl 5.14.2 |
00.18 | that is, Perl revision 5 version 14 and subversion 2
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00.23 | I will also be using the gedit Text Editor. |
00.27 | You can use any text editor of your choice.
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00.31 | You should have Basic knowledge of Compiling, Executing and Variables in Perl |
00.37 | If not, please go through the relevant spoken tutorials on the spoken tutorial website |
00.43 | Commenting a piece of code in Perl can be done in two ways: a. Single Line b. Multi Line
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00.50 | Single Line' |
00.51 | This type of comment is used |
00.53 | when user wants to comment a single line of code or |
00.57 | to add one liner text to explain the functionality of a piece of code |
01.02 | This type of comment starts with the symbol # (hash) . |
01.07 | Here is a demo. Let us open a new file in the Text Editor. |
01.11 | Open the Terminal and type - gedit comments dot pl & |
01.20 | Once again, reminding you that the ampersand is used to free the command prompt in the terminal. And press enter |
01.30 | Now type the following commands. |
01.32 | hash Declaring count variable press enter |
01.40 | dollar count space equal to space 1 semicolon press enter |
01.48 | print space double quotes Count is dollar count slash n double quote complete semicolon space hash prints Count is 1 |
02.06 | Now Save this file by pressing ctlr s and execute the Perl script. |
02.12 | Switch to the Terminal, and type perl hyphen c comments dot pl and press Enter. |
02.23 | This tells us that there is no syntax error |
02.26 | Now type perl comments dot pl and press Enter. |
02.33 | It will show the following output - Count is 1 |
02.39 | Let us switch back to gedit. in gedit, go to the first line and press enter. |
02.48 | Go back to the first line and type the following command. |
02.5 | Hash exclamation mark slash usr slash bin slash perl
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03.02 | This line in Perl is called as a shebang line and is the first line in a Perl program. |
03.09 | It tells where to find the Perl Interpreter. |
03.12 | Note: Though this line starts with hash symbol, it will not be considered as a single line comment by Perl. |
03.21 | Now let us look at multiline comments |
03.23 | Multi Line This type of comment is used |
03.27 | when user wants to comment a piece of code or to add description/usage of piece of code |
03.3 | This type of comment starts with the symbol equal to head and ends with equal to cut |
03.43 | Lets switch back to gedit and type the following - |
03.46 | in the comments dot pl file at the end of file type |
03.57 | equal to head press enter |
04.03 | print space double quote count variable is used for counting purpose double quote complete press enter |
04.24 | equal to cut |
04.26 | Save the file, close it and execute the Perl script. |
04.30 | On the Terminal, type perl hyphen c comments dot pl and press Enter. |
04.40 | No syntax error |
04.41 | so let us execute it perl comments dot pl |
04.48 | It will show the same output as before. Count is 1 |
04.55 | It does not print the sentence “count variable is be used for counting purpose” |
05.02 | This is because we commented the portion using equal to head and equal to cut |
05.13 | You can either use =head =cut or =begin =end. |
05.21 | These are not the special keywords used by Perl. |
05.24 | Please note there should not be any leading or trailing space(s) before = to sign and after the head, cut, begin or end word. |
05.35 | Open the Terminal once again. |
05.39 | And Type - perl gedit commentsExample dot pl & and press Enter. |
05.56 | Type the following commands as shown on the screen. |
06.02 | Here I am declaring two variables firstNum and secondNum and I am assigning some values to them. |
06.09 | Then I have commented this portion here. |
06.15 | Now I added these two numbers and assign the value to a third variable named addition. |
06.24 | Next I want to print the value using print command. |
06.31 | Save the file and execute the Perl script on the Terminal. |
06.37 | On terminal type perl hyphen c commentsExample dot pl |
06.43 | press enter.There is no syntax error |
06.47 | so execute the script by typing
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06.49 | perl commentsExample dot pl press enter |
06.56 | It will show the following output. Addition is 30 |
07.05 | This brings us to the end of this tutorial. |
07.08 | Here we learnt, To Add Comments in Perl
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07.12 | Write a perl script to find square of a number. |
07.16 | Explain the functionality of the code written using: Single Line Comment & Mutli Line Comment.
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07.23 | Watch the video available at the following link |
07.27 | It summarises the Spoken Tutorial project |
07.31 | If you do not have good bandwidth, you can download and watch it |
07.35 | The Spoken Tutorial Project Team |
07.37 | Conducts workshops using spoken tutorials |
07.41 | Gives certificates to those who pass an online test |
07.44 | For more details, please write to contact at spoken hyphen tutorial dot org |
07.51 | Spoken Tutorial Project is a part of the Talk to a Teacher project |
07.56 | It is supported by the National Mission on Education through ICT, MHRD, Government of India |
08.04 | More information on this Mission is available at the following link. |
08.09 | Hope you enjoyed this Perl tutorial. This is Amol Brahmankar signing off.
Thanks for joining. |