For the time in MANY years, I'm scheduled to teach a junior-senior level programming languages course this fall. Our students are -- uhhh -- shall we say "marginal"? (I mean, this is no Mississippi State after all.) I've looked at a number of possible textbooks and found them to be disappointingly shallow. (Well, THIS one's pretty good, but it assumes a knowledge of Scheme. sigh.) So I thought that maybe I'd do the course as it was done in olden times, as a case study of a few languages using the standards documents. I'm looking for a nice functional language to present, and Haskell seems an obvious choice. (I've dabbled a bit with ML and Miranda years ago, but haven't really done anything with Haskell.) The Haskell report, however, seems a bit daunting, particularly for our troops. (C'mon, one of you guys is really van Wijngaarden, right?) So I'm looking for suggestions: is there anything out there that's a bit more of a technical look at the language than "How to program in Haskell" but more approachable than the report? Or is Haskell not the right thing to try? Thanks for any input. Hope I didn't interrupt any serious threads on the list. Fred Hosch [EMAIL PROTECTED] Computer Science Department (504)-280-6594 University of New Orleans (504)-280-7228 (fax) New Orleans, LA 70148 _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell
