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And so it came to pass that April came to pass, and not so much updates have appeared here on the blog. But not so, anymore! Here are some updates. new skyrails version I've actually released a new version, and it's got plenty more stuff, however with a lot of hidden functionality. Mainly because they're still under construction. However, if you check the following thread, you can see what is new,
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2008-06-04 Haskell as fast as C: working at a high altitude for low level performance After the last post about high performance, high level programming, Slava Pestov, of Factor fame, wondered whether it was generally true that "if you want good performance you have to write C in your language". It's a good question to ask of a high level language. In this post I want to show how, often, we can an
2008-05-16 Write Haskell as fast as C: exploiting strictness, laziness and recursion In a recent mailing list thread Andrew Coppin complained of poor performance with "nice, declarative" code for computing the mean of a very large list of double precision floating point values: import System.Environment import Text.Printf mean :: [Double] -> Double mean xs = sum xs / fromIntegral (length xs) main
2007-11-26 No monadic headaches: multi-core concurrency is easy in Haskell Over on Good Math, Bad Math, MarkCC writes about Erlang and Haskell: Haskell systems don't, in general, parallelize well. They're particularly bad for the kind of very coarse thread-based concurrency that we need to program for on multi-core computers, or distributed systems. I suspect Mark hasn't written much multicore con
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