Re: [Haskell-cafe] Are there any female Haskellers?

2010-03-27 Thread James Russell
Maybe not on the list, but there certainly are in academia.
I can think of several off the top of my head.

2010/3/27 Günther Schmidt gue.schm...@web.de:
 Hi all,

 from the names of people on the list it seems that all users here are males.

 Just out of curiosity are there any female users here, or are we guys only
 at the moment?

 Günther


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Re: [Haskell-cafe] How many Haskell Engineer I/II/IIIs are there?

2010-02-10 Thread James Russell
In my previous job, which recently ended, we used Haskell for
at least half of our code, and most of our core stuff.
I ended up writing a lot of Java, too, but you take the good,
you take the bad.

-James

On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 10:59 AM, Jason Dusek jason.du...@gmail.com wrote:
  Although I'm fond of Haskell, in practice I am not a
  Haskell programmer -- I'm paid for Ruby and Bourne shell
  programming.

  Many of the jobs posted on this list end up being jobs
  for people who appreciate Haskell but will work in C# or
  O'Caml or some-such.

  I wonder how many people actually write Haskell,
  principally or exclusively, at work?

 --
 Jason Dusek
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[Haskell-cafe] ANNOUNCE: Functional Programming Bibliography

2010-01-14 Thread James Russell
I am pleased to announce the Functional Programming Bibliography
at http://www.catamorphism.net/

The functional programming bibliography was created in the hope
that it will be a useful resource to the functional programming
community. The site is still in an early stage of development,
and is pretty raw, and incomplete in a number of ways. Keyword
categorization, in particular, is still fairly spotty.

It currently contains in excess of 1500 references, heavily
slanted toward Haskell-related topics, and contains links to
publicly available versions of many papers, as well as links to
gated versions of some papers.

I am eager for suggestions as to how the site could be made more
useful.

Regards,

James Russell
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Re: [Haskell-cafe] ANNOUNCE: Functional Programming Bibliography

2010-01-14 Thread James Russell
On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 4:12 PM, Tim Wawrzynczak inforichl...@gmail.com wrote:
 Oh also, I noticed that you say it's powered by Haskell.

 Would you mind sharing some of your architectural details as they relate to
 Haskell with us?



Not much to it, really.  It's a LAMH thing, if you will.

The Haskell part just runs as a CGI app,
and uses the HDBC, HDBC-mysql, cgi, and xhtml
packages, and is just a few hundred lines, including all
the html templates which I create with the xhtml package.

As for the bibliography stuff,
right now I actually maintain a master .bib file
and use bibTeX along with a set of custom .bst files
to munge everything up to be imported into MySQL.

 On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 3:11 PM, Tim Wawrzynczak inforichl...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 At a quick glance,

 +5 Awesome.

 Cheers
 - Tim

 On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 3:03 PM, James Russell j.russ...@alum.mit.edu
 wrote:

 I am pleased to announce the Functional Programming Bibliography
 at http://www.catamorphism.net/

 The functional programming bibliography was created in the hope
 that it will be a useful resource to the functional programming
 community. The site is still in an early stage of development,
 and is pretty raw, and incomplete in a number of ways. Keyword
 categorization, in particular, is still fairly spotty.

 It currently contains in excess of 1500 references, heavily
 slanted toward Haskell-related topics, and contains links to
 publicly available versions of many papers, as well as links to
 gated versions of some papers.

 I am eager for suggestions as to how the site could be made more
 useful.

 Regards,

 James Russell
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[Haskell-cafe] Re: anybody can tell me the pronuncation of haskell?

2008-01-28 Thread James Russell
Tim Chevalier catamorphism at gmail.com writes:

 
 On 1/28/08, Jeremy Apthorp nornagon at gmail.com wrote:
  On 29/01/2008, Tim Chevalier catamorphism at gmail.com wrote:
   Haskell, stress on the first syllable; the first syllable is like
   the word has and the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa
   where the e is written.
  
   Sometimes you will hear people stress the second syllable, but that is
   not Preferred.
  
 
  Hass (like in hassle) kell (to rhyme with fell)
 
 
 That is not correct. The second syllable does not rhyme with fell.
 In fact, the correct pronunciation sounds like hassle with a 'k'
 inserted between the two syllables of that word.
 

Exactly.  But am I the only person who has ever seen Leave It To Beaver?
Remember Wally's slightly shady friend Eddie Haskell, who was always getting
Wally into trouble?

It's pronounced exactly like his name.

-James

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