Ali,
None of the CfPs you've sent to this mailing list over the past year appear
even remotely related to Haskell. I doubt people on this list will find
them relevant or interesting.
*Could you please stop sending CfPs to haskell and haskell-cafe?*
Thanks
Ivan
On Sun, 26 Nov 2023 at 11:19,
Most people are just subscribed to haskell-cafe instead. If you are not
there, maybe that's the one you want to be subscribed to.
In the past I have reported such conference announcements so that the
specific individuals be removed from the list.
Ivan
On Mon, 1 May 2023 at 02:34, Dominic
Can we please unsubscribe this person?
Cheers,
Ivan
On Mon, 13 Sept 2021 at 23:02, Shashank Swarup
wrote:
> ***
> The 5th International Conference on Emerging Data and Industry 4.0 (EDI40)
> Porto, Portugal
> March 22-25,
Can we please permanently ban this person and everyone from the
confscience.com domain?
Thanks,
Ivan
On Tue, 29 Jun 2021 at 08:28, Emilia Marc wrote:
> Call for papers
>
> *
>
> International Conference on Informatics Revolution for Smarter
the same conference via
> Haskell.
> Could you please keep my email in the list?
>
> I'm so grateful,
> Sorry again.
>
> On Tue, 1 Jun 2021 at 13:48, Ivan Perez
> wrote:
>
>> Admins,
>>
>> Can we please remove and permanently ban the following add
Admins,
Can we please remove and permanently ban the following addresses from this
list?
gharred.h...@gmail.com
hannah.ghar...@gmail.com
hana.ghar...@uhasselt.be
Thank you,
Ivan
On Tue, 1 Jun 2021 at 02:15, Hana Gharrad wrote:
> Conference: The 11th International Conference on Current and
Can the mailing list admins please permanently ban this address as well? 6
CfPs in 5 months and no other contribution.
Ivan
On Sun, 30 May 2021 at 02:05, Mayssa HEMDANI
wrote:
> Call for papers
> *
> International Conference on Recent Theories
For the record: I have 12 CfP from this person (or bot?) via the Haskell
Mailing list so far in 2021. I think enough is enough.
Ivan
On Sat, 29 May 2021 at 15:58, Ivan Perez
wrote:
> Haskell mailing lists admins,
>
> Can we please permanently ban everyone from the confscience.c
Haskell mailing lists admins,
Can we please permanently ban everyone from the confscience.com domain?
Thanks,
Ivan
On Sat, 29 May 2021 at 15:44, Emilia Marc wrote:
> Call for papers
>
> *
>
> International Conference on Informatics Revolution
on Plagiarism.
* All submissions are expected to comply with the ACM Policies for
Authorship
detailed at
https://www.acm.org/publications/authors/information-for-authors.
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Ivan Perez (PC Chair; NIA)
Alan Jeffrey, Mozilla Research.
Christiaan Baaij, QBayLogic.
César Sánchez
Nice :)
Without knowing much about the specifics of this, but more as a (permanent)
student of Ukrainian language, I'm happy to see anything involving
Ukrainian :)
My vague understanding when reading the above is that, through this, I can
provide my voice, plus some text in ukrainian, and it is
28, 2013 at 2:23 PM, Ivan Perez ivanperezdoming...@gmail.com
wrote:
The people working on HOpenCV are very open to incorporating other's
programmer's patches. Maybe you can incorporate your changes to
cv-combinators? (Project's been halted since 2010, I'm sure they'll be very
happy to see
Cool. Thanks a lot for uploading this.
I have a question (and I confess that I haven't checked the link). How is
this related to or overlaps with cv-combinators?
Cheers
Ivan
On 28 September 2013 06:18, Arjun Comar nru...@gmail.com wrote:
After receiving feedback, I went ahead and split out
Hi Conal, hi café,
I'm currently devoting most of my time to this and plan to continue doing
so (in the form of a PhD and work via my company).
I've been working on a thorough review of the current status and a
comparative analysis (using a fairly demanding, well-known algorithm to
compare
I think they do work. cv-combinators depends on HOpenCV, which depends on
OpenCV 2.0.
On 28 September 2013 16:03, Arjun Comar nru...@gmail.com wrote:
No, these are unrelated. Cv-combinators hasn't really worked since OpenCV
2.0 waa released I believe.
On Sep 28, 2013 8:54 AM, Ivan Perez
believe.
On Sep 28, 2013 8:54 AM, Ivan Perez ivanperezdoming...@gmail.com
wrote:
Cool. Thanks a lot for uploading this.
I have a question (and I confess that I haven't checked the link). How
is this related to or overlaps with cv-combinators?
Cheers
Ivan
On 28 September 2013 06:18, Arjun
Thank you, Mike. This is definitely not the answer I got when I contacted
FP more than a month ago. It's good to see that they are broadening the
definition :)
On 26 September 2013 18:35, Mike Meyer m...@mired.org wrote:
I got some clarification on what unpublished means for FP Complete
Thank you very much for the work. It is deeply appreciated.
I'll test all of Keera's programs with these new versions and let you know
if something comes up.
Best regards
Ivan
On 15 September 2013 18:23, Sven Panne svenpa...@gmail.com wrote:
New versions of the OpenGL packages are available
You may want to check one of Keera Studios' apps. All four of these do what
you want:
https://github.com/ivanperez-keera/haskellifi-trayicon
https://github.com/ivanperez-keera/keera-diamondcard-sms-trayicon
https://github.com/ivanperez-keera/keera-three-balance-checker
Hi café,
I just spent the whole day fighting ghc and cabal to get my program
compiled in windows (and I haven't succeeded yet :) )
realgcc is not very happy about paths with spaces in them (I think
there's an open bug about the way ghc calls realgcc, which manifests
if you use extra-lib-dirs in
Hi cafe,
I'm seeing a binary executable file every time I try to access
haskell.org/hoogle.
I don't know if the maintainers are aware of this.
Cheers.
Ivan
___
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
This is very cool. I've been keeping an eye on this library for a few
months.
Keep it on!
On 19 March 2013 15:18, Heinrich Apfelmus apfel...@quantentunnel.de wrote:
Peter Althainz wrote:
Dear All,
I'm happy to announce release 0.2.1 of HGamer3D, the game engine with
Haskell API, featuring
I am happy to see this implemented. Thanks Michael!
On 15 March 2013 00:49, Michael Steele mikesteel...@gmail.com wrote:
I uploaded a new packaged named Win32-services. This library is a partial
binding to the Win32 System Services API. It's now easier to write Windows
service applications in
I, too, am very happy to see this implemented. I'll give it a try and
tell you how it goes. (not inmediately, sadly, I don't have my arduino
with me.)
Thanks a lot!
On 11 February 2013 08:04, Alfredo Di Napoli alfredo.dinap...@gmail.com wrote:
Sounds cool!
Thanks for your effort! :)
A.
On
Nathan,
David is right. Using the x86 Android image in a VM could be fast
enough (if you computer has virtualization support)
I haven't tried to compile GHC for android myself. At the present
time, and taking into account that it would probably be slow to
execute and lack all the interesting
On 12 December 2012 18:16, Bardur Arantsson s...@scientician.net wrote:
On 12/12/2012 06:01 PM, Janek S. wrote:
Well, one big issue is that Linux distribution packagers have control of
the entire stack. A (hypothetical) Haskell package manager wouldn't.
In Gentoo, there are many package
Well, one advantage of cabal over nix is that cabal works on windows.
I haven't tried to install nix on windows, but:
Portability.
Nix should run on most Unix systems, including Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X.
Has anyone tried it?
Cheers,
Ivan
On 12 December 2012 18:55, Ertugrul Söylemez
this in cabal.
On 16 December 2012 12:10, Ivan Perez ivanperezdoming...@gmail.com wrote:
On 12 December 2012 18:16, Bardur Arantsson s...@scientician.net wrote:
On 12/12/2012 06:01 PM, Janek S. wrote:
Well, one big issue is that Linux distribution packagers have control of
the entire stack
On 8 December 2012 03:12, Albert Y. C. Lai tre...@vex.net wrote:
I do not understand the conflict. First you have GHC, and it comes with
bytestring-0.9.2. Then one of two things happen, but I can't see a conflict
either way:
* You request A, but A should be fine with the existing
that depends on it.
On 8 December 2012 16:32, Albert Y. C. Lai tre...@vex.net wrote:
On 12-12-08 07:39 AM, Ivan Perez wrote:
When you install A, you may not know that you'll need to depend on a
lower version of bytestring later on. Cabal will pick the highest
version available (0.10 if present
, 2012 at 3:59 PM, Ivan Perez ivanperezdoming...@gmail.com
wrote:
Hello haskellers,
A few months ago I sent an email to Vasyl Pasternak regarding a couple
of bugs in hgettext [1], together with a small patch that fixes them.
I never received an answer and I can see that the error persists
Hello haskellers,
A few months ago I sent an email to Vasyl Pasternak regarding a couple
of bugs in hgettext [1], together with a small patch that fixes them.
I never received an answer and I can see that the error persists. Does
anyone know where he is? What would you recommend at this point?
Hello everyone,
I've spent the last couple of days fighting my way around a dependency
hell with my own libraries and packages.
If I install them package by package (by hand), I'm very likely to hit
one of these conflicts that I'm talking about. A simple example of
something that did happen:
-
Hi haskellers,
I've been having problems to access hackage.haskell.org for the past
2-4 hours. Is everything ok?
Cheers,
Ivan
___
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
I found [1] a few months ago. It outputs Java bytecode, so it should work
on android. Given that Android development in java is very well supported
in eclipse, you might want to use haskell/frege only for the internals of
your program and keep coding your interface in Java.
[1]
Hi,
I work developing multi-platform applications in Haskell. This poses
the following problem: I cannot compile binaries for windows from
linux (AFAIK). I solved this problem with the following
sledgehammer: I installed windows in a VM, I installed GHC, I
installed all the C/C++ headers
Hi,
I am not the maintainer.
AFAIK, haskell98 is only used to import System in Test.hs.
You should be able to remove the dependency on haskell98 from the
cabal file and install the library without problems. In order to test
it, move Test.hs to a temp directory after installing the library,
without problems this way.
Cheers,
Ivan
On 28 June 2012 18:18, Ivan Perez ivanperezdoming...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I am not the maintainer.
AFAIK, haskell98 is only used to import System in Test.hs.
You should be able to remove the dependency on haskell98 from the
cabal file and install
Hi,
You code fails because a link is not a node of kind Text, I think.
What you want is to get the text from a child node of an anchor node.
I think the following should work:
is_link :: (ArrowXml a) = a XmlTree XmlTree
is_link = hasName a
process_link :: (ArrowXml a) = a XmlTree XmlTree
(And just to be as precise as I can and avoid confusion, when I said
link I meant unnamed anchor node with an href attribute)
On 26 June 2012 10:15, Ivan Perez ivanperezdoming...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
You code fails because a link is not a node of kind Text, I think.
What you want is to get
This is a known issue ([1]), and my guess, according to [2], is that
it is fixed in the latest version ([3]), which has not been uploaded
to hackage yet.
What happens if you install gtk from that repo instead? You may want
to try to apply the patch to the version of gtk2hs that is available
on
I spent quite some time going through the cabal docs to generate some
files automatically with hails. I totally feel your pain :)
What I'm going to suggest is not really a solution to your problem,
but since modifying the hooks to install specific programs is not the
best solution either, you
Hi,
A while ago somebody posed the question What if you get hit by a
bus, regarding the apparent lack of Haskell developers that could
continue somebody's work if something happened to them. I just created
a linkedin group for FP programmers available for hire on a
per-project basis ([1]). I hope
I tried it and it's very cool. Simple, but nice.
It would be great to improve both this and Marionetta [1], so that we
can create those dancing moves using this second package and have it
generate instructions in your DSL (I fear the moves won't look so
natural if we program all of them by hand).
Hi everyone,
I wrote a small app that suggests default passwords for visible wifi
networks (currently only some Telefonica Jazztel Wifis in Spain, but
could be extended). Not a big deal (less than 400 lines of code with
the GUI), but some people asked me to release it, so here it is.
Disclaimer
Is this the paper you are looking for:
http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~robby/courses/395-495-2009-fall/quick.pdf
?
On 1 June 2012 11:20, Yves Parès yves.pa...@gmail.com wrote:
Yes ^^ but I can't find this paper, Koen Claessen website doesn't mention it
and the link on the page
On 31 May 2012 01:30, Jonathan Geddes geddes.jonat...@gmail.com wrote:
I love Haskell. It is my absolute favorite language. But I have a very hard
time finding places where I can actually use it!
This has been bugging me for years and, like you, I think we ought to
lean towards web-pages and
FYI, you'll also have to compile all the dependencies with profiling on as well.
On 20 April 2012 12:40, Øystein Kolsrud kols...@gmail.com wrote:
Well, the problem was that I didn't know how to go about compiling it with
profiling support. Thanks for the tip! I'll try that out.
/Øystein
On
Hi everyone,
I wrote a small app to keep my Three Mobile PayG balance always
under control. I've been using it for a while and it seems to work fine.
It's just an icon docked in the system bar that shows the current balance
when you move the mouse over it.
If you don't know what Three Mobile is,
If nothing else helps, you may want to take a look at frege [1].
[1] http://code.google.com/p/frege/
On 10 March 2012 22:42, bart...@fpcomplete.com wrote:
I looked on haskell.org for solutions to Haskell/Java interop, but there
doesn't seem to be any current project. What is the status of
Hi, cafe,
I find myself in the unusual position of having to recommend a few
books on Java to people who want to use it professionally. As the people
demanding this live in Burundi, I can't really say Learn Haskell.
Odds are they won't find a job there if they don't use mainstream languages.
Is
To understand how liftM2 achieves the cartesian product, I think
one way is to find liftM2's implementation and (=) implementation
as part of []'s instantiation of the Monad class.
You can find the first in Control.Monad, and the second in
the standard prelude.
Lists are monads, and as John
Hello,
I recently moved to Kenilworth, Warwickshire, UK, and I'd like
to know if there are meetings, talks, or any FP-related activities
going on around here. I contacted somebody at Warwick
University but, from what I understood, their Formal Methods
group doesn't exist as such any longer and
I don't know if there's a ghc main config file (I haven't found any) but
you can always use one of the following:
1) alias
2) Modify the lib field of one of the package config files in .ghc or
/usr/lib/ghc,
probably of ghc itself.
3) Modify your cabal files. You can use extra-lib-dirs or
I'm using Gtk2hs in windows (and linux) with no big problems. Cairo also works.
Glade does not allow me to use accents in the user interfaces on windows, but
otherwise works ok.
I haven't tried wx on windows. It works on linux and it provides a
more natural interface
(gtk will look like gtk also
In general, I like haskell the way it is, but there are a few things
that I would like to see:
(I am no language designer, so I don't know about the theoretical
implications that these
might have. Also, let me know if there exists a clean way to do any of
the following):
- Using subranges of
- Function overloading without classes. If it's not done, there must
be a good reason for it
(many good reasons, probably), but I really miss it.
That does not play well with type inference.
I understand that. But it may be ok in many simple situations,
which is actually where I tend to need
In Haskell, most of these assumptions are invalid:
* something may be curried or member of a strange typeclass (like
printf). No assumptions about the number of arguments can be
made
* It may be possible that we do not yet know the type of a because
we can't
I'm actually trying to make a list of companies and people using Haskell
for for-profit real world software development.
I'd like to know the names of those startups, if possible.
-- Ivan
On 18 December 2011 18:42, Michael Snoyman mich...@snoyman.com wrote:
On Sun, Dec 18, 2011 at 6:57 PM,
Thanks :)
It's working now. I tried it with XInput and without it. Lines seem
smoother when XInput is activated.
On 16 December 2011 11:33, Ian-Woo Kim ianwoo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi, all,
I just uploaded hxournal-0.5.1 which is implemented with .hxournal
config file, Use X Input menu
Just like Michael, I've been learning what it means to be a professional
Haskell programmer for a few months.
I think the case of Ruby on Rails and Haskell are very, very, very different.
Ruby on Rails has been around for many years. There are books, tutorials,
examples, websites, etc. Still,
you when modifying the code.
Thank you again for your interest.
Ian-Woo
On Tue, Dec 13, 2011 at 8:03 AM, Ivan Perez
ivanperezdoming...@gmail.com wrote:
In other news, the program runs, but I can't draw anything. I tried it
with a wacom and a mouse.
Ian-Woo, let me know
In a few days I plan to release a small GTK frontend that I've been using for a
few months.
If you give either of them a try, I'd be glad to know where it got you.
Cheers,
Ivan Perez
___
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
http
Unfortunately, I have all the *-dev packages I need. Like somebody
else said, it's a different problem.
Linking the file worked for me.
Cheers
On 13 December 2011 02:43, Brandon Allbery allber...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 19:22, Ian-Woo Kim ianwoo...@gmail.com wrote:
A
In other news, the program runs, but I can't draw anything. I tried it
with a wacom and a mouse.
Ian-Woo, let me know if you need me to run some tests or to try a new
version before you release it.
As a fan of xournal, I'd be glad to do so.
Cheers,
Ivan.
On 13 December 2011 14:00, Ivan Perez
This is what I get when using the latest Ubuntu. libstdc++ is installed.
Downloading hxournal-0.5.0.0...
Configuring hxournal-0.5.0.0...
Preprocessing library hxournal-0.5.0.0...
Preprocessing executables for hxournal-0.5.0.0...
Building hxournal-0.5.0.0...
[ 1 of 41] Compiling Paths_hxournal (
/QuickCheck/State.hi is missing (use --force to
override)
QuickCheck-2.4.1.1: file Test/QuickCheck/Exception.hi is missing (use
--force
to override)
QuickCheck-2.4.1.1: cannot find libHSQuickCheck-2.4.1.1.a on library path
(use
--force to override)
2011/11/3 Ivan Perez ivanperezdoming
Thanks a lot for this. I've been developing a Graphic Adventure IDE in
haskell that I'm about
to release. It uses Cairo to draw game-state diagrams and this will
sure solve my speed issues.
2011/11/2 Felipe Almeida Lessa felipe.le...@gmail.com:
On Wed, Nov 2, 2011 at 9:14 AM, Eugene Kirpichov
that works both on Windows (XP and 7, both x86) and Linux
(x86 amd64).
The software will be released in a few days, if everything goes well.
You'll be able to find
it at keera.es, but I'll let you know when I release it anyway.
Cheers,
Ivan Perez.
PS. I just re-subscribed to this mailing list. I can't
Matthew Bromberg wrote:
...
I'm not sure why an auto-documentation tool shouldn't be a bit more
forgiving vis a vis it's syntax. Maybe flag errors as warnings but
keep on going.
...
I can't help you about the haddock thing but, in my experience,
if you forgive that kind of mistakes, many
70 matches
Mail list logo