Thank you everybody for your input!
I'm sorry for the delay: I've been making Christmas cards, etc. (Go
LibreOffice!)
I wish I had something satisfying to report, but I'm still fiddling. If I get a
well-working setup, and it's not already in TEXTEDITORS.md, I'll definitely add
it.
~ Anyho
In general, please anyone on this thread:
If you clarify suggestions that can be good for new contributors with
little or no qualifications, submit merge-request changes to the
TEXTEDITORS.md document.
While we can't take on every issue in the Haskell ecosystem, we
certainly have an interest in l
>
>
> haskdogs sounds like it's solving a similar problem to codex. Any
> insight to their relative strengths and weaknesses?
>
>
Oh wow. I was not aware of codex, so I can't compare them, but I'll
definitely be trying that out. At first glance, I think haskdogs is stack
specific and codex is not,
On 11/14/2017 11:04 AM, Samuel Tay wrote:
> Hasktags generates pretty much all the tags you want relevant to
> your project. If you have git submodules, forks of other projects
> locally, etc. then you can pass these directly via the CLI, e.g.
>
> hasktags -b "src deps/package1 deps/package2 /some/
On 11/14/2017 12:02 PM, David Thomas wrote:
> While the general case for TH is intractable, it would probably be
> pretty simple to write a script that can generate tags locations for
> identifiers generated by specific, known cases - particularly
> Persistent.
>
> At work I took a bit of a differe
While the general case for TH is intractable, it would probably be pretty
simple to write a script that can generate tags locations for identifiers
generated by specific, known cases - particularly Persistent.
At work I took a bit of a different approach, and wrote a generator that
looks at the T
Hasktags generates pretty much all the tags you want relevant to your
project. If you have git submodules, forks of other projects locally, etc.
then you can pass these directly via the CLI, e.g.
hasktags -b "src deps/package1 deps/package2 /some/other/location"
Another cool tool built off haskta
Hi!
On 11/13/2017 06:30 AM, jake wrote:
> In Haskell code, I'd like the ability to click an identifier and go
> to its definition. How do I do this?
You're not alone in your frustration. I think the only people who have
a really good answer to this question are users of emacs + intero (+
stack).
On 11/13/2017 04:49 AM, Jason Harrer wrote:
> I don't think this is really the appropriate place for such a question.
> First of all, you're using an IDE I've never even heard of before, and
> second of all, the question is not related to Snowdrift code.
>
I don't fully agree, Jason. This is a f
I don't think this is really the appropriate place for such a question.
First of all, you're using an IDE I've never even heard of before, and
second of all, the question is not related to Snowdrift code.
On Mon, Nov 13, 2017 at 12:30 AM, jake wrote:
> In Haskell code, I'd like the ability to c
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