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CONTENTS

NAME

perlcommunity - a brief overview of the Perl community

DESCRIPTION

This document aims to provide an overview of the vast perl community, which is far too large and diverse to provide a detailed listing. If any specific niche has been forgotten, it is not meant as an insult but an omission for the sake of brevity.

The Perl community is as diverse as Perl, and there is a large amount of evidence that the Perl users apply TMTOWTDI to all endeavors, not just programming. From websites, to IRC, to mailing lists, there is more than one way to get involved in the community.

Where to Find the Community

There is a central directory for the Perl community: https://perl.org maintained by the Perl Foundation (https://www.perlfoundation.org/), which tracks and provides services for a variety of other community sites.

Raku

Perl's sister language, Raku (formerly known as Perl 6), maintains its own directory of community resources at https://raku.org/community/.

Mailing Lists and Newsgroups

Perl runs on e-mail; there is no doubt about it. The Camel book was originally written mostly over e-mail and today Perl's development is co-ordinated through mailing lists. The largest repository of Perl mailing lists is located at https://lists.perl.org.

Most Perl-related projects set up mailing lists for both users and contributors. If you don't see a certain project listed at https://lists.perl.org, check the particular website for that project. Most mailing lists are archived at