2009/1/9 John A. De Goes <j...@n-brain.net>:
>
> If you're looking for a project to take on, I would suggest starting with
> the following:
>
> A high-level, type-safe AMQP client written in 100% Haskell, which provides
> a clean way of handling hundreds of unique message types.
>
> Then it would be possible to hook it up to any AMQP broker (most likely
> RabbitMQ). There are logical steps beyond the above (an embedded Haskell
> broker), but the above project is far from trivial. And the main
> undertaking, I think, consists not in coding to the spec (for which there is
> some help; a JSON representation of the AMQP specification can be processed
> and used to emit language-specific code), but in finding a design that works
> well in Haskell.
<snip & reorder>
I apologize, but my question was geared more towards understanding
what high-level OTP-like libraries Haskell is lacking, not full blown
applications that haven't been written in Haskell.  It sounded like
you had some specific insight into this.

Cheers,
Creighton
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