#3202: Make XNoMonomorphismRestriction the default in GHCi
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Reporter: YitzGale | Owner: pcapriotti
Type: feature request | Status: closed
Priority: high
#5910: Holes with other constraints
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Reporter: xnyhps | Owner:
Type: feature request | Status: new
Priority: normal
#6028: warning for cyclic unimplemented defaults
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Reporter: lerkok| Owner:
Type: feature request | Status: new
Priority: normal|
Hello Haskellers,
I've been wondering whether it might be useful to add a feature to
Haddock similar to what can be found in other API documentation systems,
specifically an optional parseable since-attribute, declaring the last
package version when the associated definition/symbol was introduced
a lot of packages are doing this already, would be nice to formalize it
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 3:56 AM, Herbert Valerio Riedel h...@gnu.org wrote:
Hello Haskellers,
I've been wondering whether it might be useful to add a feature to
Haddock similar to what can be found in other API
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 3:56 AM, Herbert Valerio Riedel h...@gnu.org wrote:
I've been wondering whether it might be useful to add a feature to
Haddock similar to what can be found in other API documentation systems,
specifically an optional parseable since-attribute, declaring the last
package
On 09/04/2012 12:56 PM, Herbert Valerio Riedel wrote:
Hello Haskellers,
I've been wondering whether it might be useful to add a feature to
Haddock similar to what can be found in other API documentation systems,
specifically an optional parseable since-attribute, declaring the last
package
Would such an enhancement to Haddock be worthwhile or is it a bad idea?
Has such a proposal come up in the past already? Are there alternative
approaches to consider?
It would be even cooler to automatically figure them out from the
hackage history.
I recently stumbled across a document
Bryan O'Sullivan b...@serpentine.com writes:
I think it would be very useful. We don't have any way of specifying
identifier-level attributes right now that I know of, and such a capability
would be helpful beyond just this use, too.
...what other use-cases for identifier-level attributes do
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 2:29 PM, Herbert Valerio Riedel h...@gnu.org wrote:
Bryan O'Sullivan b...@serpentine.com writes:
I think it would be very useful. We don't have any way of specifying
identifier-level attributes right now that I know of, and such a capability
would be helpful beyond just
[apologies for any cross-posting]
4th OPEN Answer Set Programming Competition 2013
Call for Benchmark Problems
University of Calabria - Vienna University of Technology
Hi,
Manish Trivedi trivman...@gmail.com writes:
I am running into a weird out of memory issue. While running timeplot over
an input file having ~800 rows. From below provided info, seems like
machine has enough ram (1849MB).
Please let me know if anyone has pointers.
I have run tplot on much
Hi,
Am Montag, den 03.09.2012, 18:31 +0200 schrieb Harald Bögeholz:
I would greatly appreciate advice from experienced Haskellers why this
has happened. The program is hosted on github; this is the direct link
to the change with unexpected outcome:
I agree with Timothy. In the Agda code base, we have many occurrences
of Timothy's pattern
aux (OneSpecificConstructor args) = ...
aux _ = __IMPOSSIBLE__
where __IMPOSSIBLE__ generates code to throw an internal error.
A finer type analysis that treats each
Monads are monoids in the category of endofunctors
This Monoid instance for the endofunctors of the set of all elements
of (m a) typematch in Haskell with FlexibleInstances:
instance Monad m = Monoid (a - m a) where
mappend = (=) -- kleisly operator
mempty = return
The article can
Hi Manish,
Please provide the input file, I'll debug this.
On Mon, Sep 3, 2012 at 1:06 PM, Manish Trivedi trivman...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I am running into a weird out of memory issue. While running timeplot over
an input file having ~800 rows. From below provided info, seems like machine
Your post feels similar to another one posted recently...
http://web.jaguarpaw.co.uk/~tom/blog/2012/09/02/what-is-a-monad-really.html
just fyi, :-),
kris
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 6:39 AM, Alberto G. Corona agocor...@gmail.com wrote:
Monads are monoids in the category of endofunctors
This
Not to mention the ugly formatting ;)
2012/9/5 Richard O'Keefe o...@cs.otago.ac.nz:
On 4/09/2012, at 10:39 PM, Alberto G. Corona wrote:
Monads are monoids in the category of endofunctors
This Monoid instance for the endofunctors of the set of all elements
of (m a) typematch in Haskell
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 3:39 AM, Alberto G. Corona agocor...@gmail.comwrote:
Monads are monoids in the category of endofunctors
This Monoid instance for the endofunctors of the set of all elements
of (m a) typematch in Haskell with FlexibleInstances:
instance Monad m = Monoid (a - m a)
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 4:21 PM, Alexander Solla alex.so...@gmail.comwrote:
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 3:39 AM, Alberto G. Corona agocor...@gmail.comwrote:
Monads are monoids in the category of endofunctors
This Monoid instance for the endofunctors of the set of all elements
of (m a)
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 5:14 AM, Andreas Abel andreas.a...@ifi.lmu.de wrote:
I agree with Timothy. In the Agda code base, we have many occurrences of
Timothy's pattern
aux (OneSpecificConstructor args) = ...
aux _ = __IMPOSSIBLE__
where __IMPOSSIBLE__
I've pushed the discussed changes to the repo[1], it'd be good if you
(and other users) could test them before they get to hackage.
[1] darcs get http://patch-tag.com/r/Saizan/syb-with-class/
-- Andrea
___
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Hi,
I have code like this and it leaves lots of zombies of flow-export.
Then I add waitForProcess Well I do not know where to put it.
Before or after 'hGetContents' both make the program hung.
exportCSV :: FilePath - IO [String]
exportCSV file = do
csv_ - withBinaryFile file ReadMode $ \i
On 5 September 2012 13:45, Magicloud Magiclouds
magicloud.magiclo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I have code like this and it leaves lots of zombies of flow-export.
Then I add waitForProcess Well I do not know where to put it.
Before or after 'hGetContents' both make the program hung.
You're
You might have to use hGetContents, then waitForProcess, and then
terminateProcess -- you can then check if the process is indeed terminated
using getProcessExitCode.
On Wed, Sep 5, 2012 at 1:45 PM, Magicloud Magiclouds
magicloud.magiclo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I have code like this and it
Forgot about that, just read 'readProcess' code to figure out.
Thanks.
On Wed, Sep 5, 2012 at 12:37 PM, Ivan Lazar Miljenovic
ivan.miljeno...@gmail.com wrote:
On 5 September 2012 13:45, Magicloud Magiclouds
magicloud.magiclo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I have code like this and it leaves lots
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 9:39 PM, Mike Ledger eleventyn...@gmail.com wrote:
You might have to use hGetContents, then waitForProcess, and then
terminateProcess -- you can then check if the process is indeed terminated
using getProcessExitCode.
Er? When waitForProcess returns the process is
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