So I take it you are saying that it really *cleans* Haskell's clock when it comes to speed? ;-)

- Greg


On Nov 3, 2009, at 9:04 PM, Richard O'Keefe wrote:


On Nov 4, 2009, at 9:30 AM, Deniz Dogan wrote:
So what's the deal with Clean? Why is it preferable to Haskell? Why is it not?

(1) Speed.
(2) If you are a Windows developer, the fact that Windows is the primary
   platform and others (even Mac OS, which is historically ironic) are
   second- (or in the case of Solaris) third-class citizens.
(3) Did I mention speed?
(4) It comes with its own IDE. I don't think it can do anything much that Haskell tools can't do, but if you don't like looking for things, it's
   a help.
(5) Plus of course there's speed.
(6) They're working on a Haskell front end, so you won't actually have to
   choose.  (Anyone doing a Clean front end for Haskell?)
(7) Haskell now has bang-patterns so you can specify (a bound on) intended strictness when you declare a function. But that's not in Haskell 98.
(8) As a result of this, speed is a bit more "declarative" than adding
   $! in strange places.
(9) There's a theorem prover for Clean, called Sparkle.
Sadly, it's Windows-only, but we all know what most computers on the
   planet run, don't we?  (It's probably Symbian, actually.)
(10) And finally, of course, there's speed.  Did I mention that?



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