When submissions are put in, there is a way for mentors to talk to students to ask for more details. Those don't show up in the published abstract you can see at the end.
The discussion shifted towards focusing on getting things to a point where Haskell can meaningfully use SWIG rather than on Qt per se but it is good to keep such a concrete goal in mind when working on something as abstract as SWIG. I agree that Qt has a somewhat horrible API. =) -Edward On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 12:34 PM, harry <volderm...@hotmail.com> wrote: > Edward Kmett <ekmett <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > There should be a link from the google-melange website, but one slight > shift in focus is on either getting SWIG bindings or possibly even using > Ian-Woo Kim's C++FFI tools. Carter may be able to go into more detail. > > There's almost no information in the google project abstract. My concern is > that the problem isn't generating the bindings (as I've said, that's been > done twice before). It's that Qt's slots-and-signals are horrible to use > from the Haskell side. If the student hasn't already got a good idea of how > to solve this, I fear that this project will be just generate another > unusable set of bindings. > > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell-Cafe mailing list > Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe >
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