Jerzy Karczmarczuk wrote:
Apparently the form (#) is considered illegal. It works on my Linux.
On Win2000: parse error on input ')'
(#) is legal Haskell 98, but it is illegal in GHC when -fglasgow-exts
is on. It should have nothing to do with the platform.
Thre reason is that GHC uses the sy
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 01:26:31PM +0100, Jerzy Karczmarczuk wrote:
> Apparently the form (#) is considered illegal. It works on my Linux.
> On Win2000: parse error on input ')'
You don't happen to use -fglasgow-exts on windows?
That gives parse error on the sequence "(#"
I guess it's related to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
> I've been experimenting with making an asynchronous IO library. At the
> moment it uses Haskell threads but the idea is that it could be
> transparently extended to use system AIO.
I think what you are really asking for is asynchronous events, a la Reppy.
I don't l
On Wed, Dec 11, 2002 at 12:05:29PM -, Simon Marlow wrote:
> > Is it possible to modify the behaviour so that if --make
> > -no-hs-main is specified, GHC won't perform the link if it finds
> > a main function?
>
> I think we should probably just have a -no-link option rather than
> overload th
I might have done something wrong, but... --
I defined
infix 5 #
the sharp character is accepted, the definition of the associated
procedure as well, the usage a # b works.
Apparently the form (#) is considered illegal. It works on my Linux.
On Win2000: parse error on input ')'
Have you ever