1.1 The Birth of Perl 6
Back on July 18,
2000, the second day of the fourth Perl Conference (TPC 4), a small
band of Perl geeks gathered to prepare for a meeting of the Perl 5
Porters later that day. The topic at hand was the current state of
the Perl community. Four months had passed since the 5.6.0 release of
Perl, and although it introduced some important features, none were
revolutionary.
There had been very little forward movement in the previous year. It
was generally acknowledged that the Perl 5 codebase had grown
difficult to maintain. At the same time, infighting on the
perl5-porters list had grown so intense that
some of the best developers decided to leave. It was time for a
change, but no one was quite sure what to do. They started
conservatively with plans to change the organization of Perl
development.
An hour into the discussion, around the time most people nod off in
any meeting, Jon Orwant (the reserved, universally respected editor
of the Perl Journal) stepped quietly into the room and snapped
everyone to attention with an entirely uncharacteristic and
well-planned gesture. Smash! A coffee mug hit
the wall. "We are *@$!-ed
(Crash!) unless we can come up with something
that will excite the community (Pow!), because
everyone's getting bored and going off and doing
other things! (Bam!)" (At
least, that's basically how Larry tells it. As is
usually the case with events like this, no one remembers exactly what
Jon said.)
Awakened by this display, the group started to search for a real
solution. The language needed room to grow. It needed the freedom to
evaluate new features without the obscuring weight of legacy code.
The community needed something to believe in, something to get
excited about.
Within a few hours the group settled on Perl 6, a complete rewrite of
Perl. The plan wasn't just a language change, just
an implementation change, or just a social change. It was a paradigm
shift. Perl 6 would be the community's rewrite of
Perl, and the community's rewrite of itself.
Would Perl 6, particularly Perl 6 as a complete rewrite, have
happened without this meeting? Almost certainly. The signs appeared
on the lists, in conferences, and in journals months in advance. If
it hadn't started that day, it would have happened a
week later, or perhaps a few months later, but it would have
happened. It was a step the community needed to take.
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