On 02/04/2013 04:26 PM, Timon Gehr wrote:
On 02/04/2013 09:01 AM, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
On Monday, February 04, 2013 04:34:32 deadalnix wrote:
3/ Haskell

In haskell, all functions are pure, which make the conflation
between the function and its result possible in an unambiguous
manner.

Haskell doesn't even really have variables per se.

That is inaccurate.

It's more like they're functions with no arguments.

A lambda function always has exactly one argument.


s/argument/parameter/g

...
And there are no parens on functions in haskell of any kind to begin
with. The syntax isn't C-like at all.
...

s x y z = ((x z) (y z)) -- note the parens



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