Thanks everyone for the answers. Mine is just an experiment, but if I succeed in keeping it up and to come with something useful, I won't hesitate to poke you :) Btw, in case I succeed, posts will appear here:
http://www.alfredodinapoli.com/posts.html and here: http://www.cakesolutions.net/teamblogs/ Bye, Alfredo On 13 January 2013 23:43, Christopher Howard < christopher.how...@frigidcode.com> wrote: > On 01/13/2013 03:15 AM, Alfredo Di Napoli wrote: > > Morning Cafe, > > > > I'm planning to do a series of write-ups about Category Theory, to > > publish them on the company's blog I'm currently employed. > > I'm not a CT expert, but since the best way to learn something is to > > explain it to others, I want to take a shot :) > > In my mind I will structure the posts following Awodey's book, but I'm > > wondering how can I make my posts a little more "real world". > > I always read about the "Hask category", which seems to be the > > "bootstrap" of the whole logic behind Haskell. Can you please give my > > materials/papers/links/blogs to the Hask category and briefly explain me > > how it relates to Category Theory and Haskell itself? > > > > I hope my question is clear enough, in case is not, I'll restate :P > > > > Cheers, > > A. > > > > > > You want to give us the link to that blog? > > If you can keep your explanations reasonably illustrative and easy to > understand, you'll get a regular reader out of me. > > -- > frigidcode.com > > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell-Cafe mailing list > Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe > >
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