YAPC::NA 2007

June 25-27, Houston, TX

Wiki - Master Classes

Similar to last year, there will be two post-conference days of Master classes offered by some of the most notable trainers and authors in the Perl community. The cost is $200 for each two-day offering (well below market). If you're interested in registering for one of these classes, please make sure to choose the registration with the Master Course option. If you will be utilizing the on-campus housing (dorms) during the conference and will need similar accommodations during your class, please follow the steps on the extended housing page. If you've registered and purchased a Master Class, please add your name to the Master Class Attendance page under the appropriate class.

Stonehenge Consulting

Stonehenge Consulting will be offering two 2-day classes. Learning Perl, offered by Randal Schwartz and Intermediate Perl, offered by brian d foy.

Learning Perl

Trainer: Randal Schwartz
This course is based on Randal, Tom, and brian d foy's popular O'Reilly Nutshell book, Learning Perl. The course presumes no prior knowledge of Perl, and exposes the course participants to the most important parts of Perl -- those items that are needed to accomplish many common tasks, and to lay the groundwork for more advanced study.

Intermediate Perl

Trainer: brian d foy
This course uses O'Reilly's "Intermediate Perl" by Randal L. Schwartz, brian d foy, and Tom Phoenix. It's suitable for students who have completed the Learning Perl (Llama) course, or who otherwise have a good background in the basics of Perl.

Using the appropriate data structure can greatly simplify development and maintenance of programs. This course covers advanced data structures in Perl.

Large programs — whether written by a single programmer or a team of programmers, each working on discrete yet interdependent libraries, modules, and other program sections — require special programming techniques. The Alpaca course will show you how to keep your Perl program running smoothly even when it must grow past the 100-lines-of-code barrier.


version 6 saved on 05/23/07 06:45 AM by Jeremy Fluhmann (‎jfluhmann‎)

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