Could you elaborate on how this is better/different from blaze-html? I'm a bit confused - is it just the same thing but works with Haste, while blaze-html doesn't? What's the main idea?
Thanks! Andrew On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 7:02 AM, Alberto G. Corona <agocor...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > haste-perch defines builder elements (perchs) for Haste.DOM elements that > are appendable, so that dynamic HTML can be created in the client in a > natural way, like textual HTML, but programmatically and with the advantage > of static type checking. It can be ported to other haskell-js compilers. > > http://hackage.haskell.org/package/haste-perch > > This program, when compiled with haste: > > main= do > withElem "idelem" $ build $ do > div $ do > div $ do > p "hello" > p ! atr "style" "color:red" $ "world" > > return () > > Creates these element: > > <div id= "idelem"> <-- was already in the HTML > <div> > <div> > <p> hello </p> > <p style= "color:red"> world </p> > </div> > </div> > </div> > > Since the creation is in the browser, that permit quite dynamic pages for > data > presentation, and interctive textual (a.k.a "serious") applications and, > in general > the development of client-side web frameworks using haskell with the haste > compiler. > > > See the README in the git repository: > > https://github.com/agocorona/haste-perch > > -- > Alberto. > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell mailing list > Haskell@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell > >
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