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Camels and Needles: Computer Poetry Meets the Perl Programming Language------------By Sharon Hopkins

2010-01-17 21:04 405 查看
 #!/usr/bin/perl
  APPEAL:
  listen (please, please);
  open yourself, wide;
  join (you, me),
  connect (us,together),
  tell me.
  do something if distressed;
  @dawn, dance;
  @evening, sing;
  read (books,$poems,stories) until peaceful;
  study if able;
  write me if-you-please;
  sort your feelings, reset goals, seek (friends, family, anyone);
  do*not*die (like this)
  if sin abounds;
  keys (hidden), xXyz (locks, doors), tell secrets;
  do not, I-beg-you, close them, yet.
  accept (yourself, changes),
  bind (grief, despair);
  require truth, goodness if-you-will, each moment;
  select (always), length(of-days)
  # listen (a perl poem)
  # Sharon Hopkins
  # rev. June 19, 1995
  Perl Poetry
  Article 970 of comp.lang.perl:
  Path: jpl-devvax!pl-dexxav!lwall
  From: lwall@jpl-dexxav.JPL.NASA.GOV(Larry Wall)
  Newsgroups: news.groups,rec.arts.poems,comp.lang.perl
  Subject: CALL FOR DISCUSSION: comp.lang.perl.poems
  Message-ID: <0401@jpl-devvax.JPL.NASA.GOV>
  Date: 1 Apr 90 00:00:00 GMT
  Reply-To: lwall@jpl-devvax.JPL.NSAS.GOV(Larry Wall)
  Organization: Jet Prepulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA
  Lines: 61
  It has come to my attention that there is a crying need for a place for people to express both their emotional
  and technical natures simultaneously. Several people have sent me some items which don't fit into any
  newsgroup. Perhaps it's because I recently posted to both comp.lang.perl and to rec.arts.poems, but people
  seem to be writing poems in Perl, and they're asking me where they should post them. Here is a sampling:
  From a graduate student (in finals week), the following haiku:
  study, write, study,
  do review (each word) if time.
  close book. sleep? what's that?
  And someone writing from Fort Lauderdale writes:
  sleep, close together,
  sort of sin each spring & wait;
  50% die
  A person who wishes to remain anonymous wrote the following example of "Black Perl". (The Pearl poet
  would have been shocked, no doubt.)
  BEFOREHAND: close door, each window & exit; wait until time.
  open spellbook, study, read (scan, select, tell us);
  write it, print the hex while each watches,
  reverse its length, write again;
  kill spiders, pop them, chop, split, kill them.
  unlink arms, shift, wait & listen (listening, wait),
  sort the flock (then, warn the "goats" & kill the "sheep");
  kill them, dump qualms, shift moralities,
  values aside, each one;
  die sheep! die to reverse the system
  you accept (reject, respect);
  next step,
  kill the next sacrifice, each sacrifice,
  wait, redo ritual until "all the spirits are pleased";
  do it ("as they say").
  do it(*everyone***must***participate***in***forbidden**s*e*x*).
  return last victim; package body;
  exit crypt (time, times & "half a time") & close it,
  select (quickly) & warn your next victim;
  AFTERWORDS: tell nobody.
  wait, wait until time;
  wait until next year, next decade;
  sleep, sleep, die yourself,
  die at last
  I tried that, and it actually parses in Perl. It doesn't appear to do anything useful, however. I think I'm glad,
  actually... I hereby propose the creation of comp.lang.perl.poems as a place for such items, so we don't clutter
  the perl or poems newsgroups with things that may be of interest to neither. Or, alternately, we should
  create rec.arts.poems.perl for items such as those above which merely parse, and don't do anything useful.
  (There is precedent in rec.arts.poems, after all.) Then also create comp.lang.perl.poems for poems that
  actually do something, such as this haiku of my own:
  print STDOUT q
  Just another Perl hacker,
  unless $spring
  Larry Wall lwall@jpl-devvax.jpl.nasa.gov
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