On 11/13/05, Wolfgang Jeltsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Am Samstag, 12. November 2005 00:09 schrieb David Frech: > > [...] > > > I'd like to build a web-publishing framework in Haskell that is > > totally self-contained, very portable, and easy to bootstrap ... and > > nhc98 or Yhc might be a nice place to start. > > Can you tell me/us more about this web-publishing framework?
At the moment, no. ;-) But only because I'm not sure what I want yet. I've been looking around for a way to do personal publishing (which basically for me means running an integrated wiki & blog), but I don't want to be limited to that. I want something small and simple, so most "web frameworks" are out of the question. (I also toyed with using DocBook XML but it seemed a bit heavy for my intended use.) I don't want to use templating, because I think it's wrong. I'd like to use Haskell because I'm new to it and want to use it for something "real world". I've also been influenced by Jon Udell's ideas - esp by his O'Reilly book _Practical Internet Groupware_ (sadly now out of print). One of his ideas is to put a small, embedded web server on everyone's desktop. All kinds of small peer-to-peer applications then become possible. So that means that my little run-anywhere bundle should include a small & simple web server. For higher-intensity applications I'm warming to FastCGI, since it's agnostic to web server choice (unlike using mod_perl or mod_python). So I'd like that too. ;-) And, unlike many wiki or blog engines I've tried, I want my tools to generate valid XHTML. I'm not willing to compromise on this. Cheers, - David > > > [...] > > Best wishes, > Wolfgang > _______________________________________________ > Haskell mailing list > Haskell@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell > -- There's more than one way to do it: the Perl way, and the _right_ way. _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list Haskell@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell