The distinctive Perl camel is (c) O'Reilly
Perl Workshop Home Page
Home of the Bioinformatics Perl Workshop perl workshop > courses > orientation session (0.0.0.1) > course home

course 0.0.0.1

Level: all
0.0.0.1 | all | 1 sessions
This single session will introduce you to the workshops. We'll discuss the curriculum and schedule. We'll be looking for your input in how to make the workshops more effective.

legend

course code

cat.course.level.sessions.session

e.g. 1.0.1.8

categories

0 | introduction and orientation

1 | perl fundamentals

2 | shell and prompt tools

3 | web development

4 | CPAN Modules

5 | Ruby

levels

level: all all ( 0 )

level: beginner beginner ( 1 )

level: intermediate intermediate ( 2 )

level: advanced advanced ( 3 )

[ consider using for instead of foreach ]
0.0.0.1 Orientation Session

course home

The purpose of the orientation session is to introduce the instructors, the workshop and the format of the lectures. We'll show you the features of the workshop web site as well as talk about the mailing list which is used to communicate annoucements, tips and workshop-related matters.

We want you to have the best experience possible in attending the workshops, which have been designed to help you learn more Perl. We'll be looking for your feedback during this orientation session about lecture topics. There are many possible workshop themes and we'll try to design the term's curriculum based on the interest and level of the audience. So please attend the next orientation session and let us know what you'd like to see.

other in this category

0.1.0.1 | Two Problems

other by same level

0.1.0.1 | Two Problems

2.0.0.3 | Introduction to Unix

5.0.0.1 | Hello Ruby

other by same instructor

Other courses by Sheldon McKay or Martin Krzywinski.

0.1.0.1 | Two Problems

1.0.1.8 | Introduction to Perl

1.1.2.8 | Intermediate Perl

1.2.2.1 | Effective use of map, sort and grep in Perl

2.1.2.4 | Data Mining and Analysis at the Command Line

2.2.2.2 | Prompt Tools

4.0.2.1 | Spans and Sets

4.1.2.2 | Random Numbers and Distributions