With cabal-install, usually.

Limestraël wrote:
Cabal/cabal-install are good tools for distribution and installation, but I was wondering -- as I was starting to learn how to use Cabal -- how do usually Haskell developpers build their softwares (and especially medium or big libraries) while they are *still developping them* ? With cabal-install, by doing one 'cabal configure' once and 'cabal build' each time they have altered their code ? With only Cabal, through some 'runhaskell Setup.hs build's ? The point is that I am currently writing a binding for an SDL-like library called SFML. My project is now 55-file wide (and I will have to add some more), uses hsc2hs and has a little executable (for testing purposes) in which I add some code each time I add functionnalities to my binding. What I mean is that it would be a pain to have to compile it by hand whenever I add something to my code. Currently, I compile it by using a simple shell script, but it's a little bit lousy, I think.
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