It's very sad news that Paul Hudak has died. I remember pre-ordering
The Haskell School of Expression from my local Waterstones and being
genuinely excited about its arrival - here was a book that meshed both
functional programming and multimedia - wow!. As it happens college
work (and some confusion with Hugs) got in the way of me learning
Haskell and it was another three years before I read the book
properly. As a reference, it's been near the top of my pile
programming books ever since - the simple model of reactive functional
programming it presents is the most illustrative I've seen.

Reading the notices for Paul's death was very sad but also heartening.
As I didn't know Paul personally (only through this list) I didn't
know had hard his continuing struggle with leukemia had been. I knew
he had treatment 5 years ago, but as he resumed work on Euterpea and
The Haskell School of Music and returned to generously contributing to
this list one hoped his treatment had gone well. But it was greatly
heartening that his generosity was was very large and not limited - he
clearly had made an exceptional contribution to Yale and the wider
academic world, not just as a researcher and co-creator of Haskell
(which we know about on here) but as Master of his college and an
inspiration to his students.

Condolences to his family and friends.

Stephen

On 1 May 2015 at 21:33, alex <[email protected]> wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> Lets feel for the family and friends of Paul Hudak, who sadly died on 
> Wednesday after a long battle with Leukemia.
>
> Paul has surely contributed more to the Haskell Art community than anyone, 
> e.g. writing the Haskell School of Expression, the Haskell School of Music, 
> Euterpea, his contributions to Functional Reactive Programming, in 
> co-founding and chairing the ACM SIGPLAN workshop on Functional Art, Music, 
> Modelling and Design, and of course in helping make Haskell itself in the 
> first place. As a relative outsider to the Haskell community, I can only 
> understate his achievements here, I hope no-one minds.
>
> I'll look forward to celebrating his life by reading, enjoying and benefiting 
> from all he has left.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> alex
> --
>
> Read the whole topic here: Haskell Art:
> http://lurk.org/r/topic/TLwToB0X1TBx3019CaeBt
>
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