There was a thread on Haskell-Cafe about how to pronounce Haskell. Below are some notes for beginners on how to pronounce those strange Haskell operators and 'read' Haskell programs. This is meant to be a table with formal and informal ways of saying various operators and code snippets. Symbol Pronunciation References
How would one go about modeling units (seconds, meters, meters per second, etc) in Haskell? I'm particularly interested in getting the typechecker to verify proper usage, and do not want to restrict it to any particular numeric representation (i.e. both integral seconds and fractional seconds). If this can in fact be done, it could also be used to model coordinate system axes in, say, Geometric Al
Haskell I/O can be a source of confusion and surprises for new Haskellers - if that's you, a good place to start is the Introduction to IO which can help you learn the basics (e.g. the syntax of I/O expressions) before continuing on. While simple I/O code in Haskell looks very similar to its equivalents in imperative languages, attempts to write somewhat more complex code often result in a total m
Introduction This is a tutorial for the quasiquoting facility described in Why It's Nice to be Quoted: Quasiquoting for Haskell. Quasiquoting allows programmers to use custom, domain-specific syntax to construct fragments of their program. Along with Haskell's existing support for domain specific languages, you are now free to use new syntactic forms for your EDSLs. More information on GHC's suppo
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