File Index
$#! · 0-9 · A · B · C · D · E · F · G · H · I · J · K · L · M · N · O · P · Q · R · S · T · U · V · W · X · Y · Z
A
 Action Mappers
B
 Best Practices
C
 Config
F
 Files and directories
 Filters
H
 Hello,World-2!
 Hello,World-3!
I
 Installing PET
 Introduction
L
 License
M
 MVC-style Programming
P
 PET Explained
 pet_run_cli
 pet_setup
R
 README First!
S
 Sessions
T
 TODOs
U
 Utils
How you should use PET, and what you should not do.
This document discusses the settings used in PET one can override.
To make the development and learning of PET easier, PET uses a fixed directory structure.
PET has a built-in capability called “filtering”.
While PET can be used as some sort of an “active pages” system, something similar to ASP/PHP/JSP, clearly it is not the recommended usage.
This is the “official” documentation for PET -- a (web) programming framework and application server for Perl.
The most important thing is : PET is FREE.
While PET can be used as some sort of an “active pages” system, that is clearly not the recommended usage.
While not strictly necessary, it is very much advised that you read this document about the internals and design of PET.
This is the “official” documentation for the Perl web programming framework called PET.
The class PET::Session is only a “placeholder” for sessions.
There are many parts of PET that needs finishing, rewriting or fine-tuning.
There are many utility plugins for PET, and you can also write your own!
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