There are several general efforts along those lines, e.g.

https://github.com/faylang/fay/wiki
http://www.skybluetrades.net/blog/posts/2012/11/13/fay-ring-oscillator/index.html

Anyway, while I think source to source tricks are neat, eventually having a GHC 
WebAssembly target would be better.

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Owen Densmore
Sent: Monday, July 27, 2015 11:34 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Pandoc

Whoa! And compiled to JavaScript (or maybe LLVM->Emscripten->asm.js)?

On Mon, Jul 27, 2015 at 11:23 AM, Marcus Daniels 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
You can feel good about using Pandoc.  It’s written in Haskell!

From: Friam 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf 
Of Owen Densmore
Sent: Monday, July 27, 2015 11:13 AM
To: Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: [FRIAM] Pandoc

Some of us have been using Atom text editor.  Its a bit crazy, built on Node.js 
desktop, HTML, CSS, JavaScript.

Recently Atom has grabbed the attention of folks writing papers:
    https://discuss.atom.io/t/using-atom-for-academic-writing/19222
​.. integrating LaTeX etc into a markdown language called Pandoc
​    ​
http://pandoc.org/index.html

​Weird, and hopefully wonderful.

   -- Owen
  Song of the day: http://goo.gl/uCCxD2​


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