| Since the opening of this thread by Hal Daume 11 (binary), we see a constant | flow of interesting contributions/confessions. Plenty of applications, it | seems that Haskell is really used in a wider context than we might think. | It is a pleasure to read all this.
Yes, it is indeed! As Jerzy remarks, it is quite hard to get application papers published in conferences. I know from personal experience that it's hard even when the program committee is strongly motivated to take application papers. Why? One reason is that application papers seldom have a new research result to report -- their strength is in the integration of language with application. Another is that application papers are hard to write; they can easily degenerate into a "we did this and then we did that" ramble. It is genuinely difficult to abstract the re-usable lessons from an application experience. Mindful of this, the Journal of Functional Programming *explicitly welcomes* application-oriented papers (we call them "practice and experience" papers). We have tried to articulate the criteria we use when evaluating them: http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/jfp/editorialMay98.html So let me encourage those who have responded to Hal's call to consider submitting a paper to JFP. It really is helpful to the FP community to learn hard-won lessons from others. Let's hear them! (The Haskell Community Newsletter is an excellent complementary forum. It's ideal for a short "here's what we did" mutual-information contribution. Claus has done a fantastic job with the newsletter.) Simon _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell