afie:
> Hello all,
>
> Is anybody using GHC's backend as a backend for their own compiler?
I know of one project at least, in development and undocumented, that
uses GHC's backend. However, it doesn't use the Core interface. Rather,
it uses an interface Mark Wotton and I wrote to the Stix layer o
> Hi, I would like to know how can I make a spreadsheet using Haskell
> (something like Excel, a very-reduced version, of course)
> Do I need any kind of special library? How can I make the interface so the
> user can introduce data, select data and so on?
> Thanks for your help.
> Miren Cob Isa
So there it was - another email message complaining about something on
haskell.org. "Your site is so `last century'". So I, as usual, said
"If you want it fixed, do it yourself".
And thus the new look on haskell.org.
Thanks much to Jon Lingard for giving us a facelift. The new look
(same old c
> Dell's poweredge server with the max 12gb RAM costs $15k.
> Moore's law says that
> 1. you only need an extra bit/year.
> 2. processing that extra bit will cost 50% less next year
>
> Though perhaps processing time is not linear with
> the number of bits for historical/architectural
> reasons.
Dell's poweredge server with the max 12gb RAM costs $15k.
Moore's law says that
1. you only need an extra bit/year.
2. processing that extra bit will cost 50% less next year
Though perhaps processing time is not linear with
the number of bits for historical/architectural
reasons?
I presume th
I was somewhat surprised to see that there's only one geometry library on
the haskell libraries page, and further dismayed to find that it for the
most part only does 2d. It seems like haskell should be a natural fit for
higher-order geometric libraries - has anyone heard of such?
Abe
__
Am Freitag, 13. Februar 2004 01:23 schrieben Sie:
> wolfgang:
> > Hello,
> >
> > how do I insert non-ASCII and maybe even non-Latin-1 characters in
> > Haddock documentation?
> >
> > Wolfgang
>
> Looks like it might be difficult. The haddock lexer src has:
>
> $alphanum = [A-Za-z0-9]
>
> So
Malcolm W - thanks for your comments. I did reply (nothing important),
but your university has my address blacklisted (dynamic ip). Sorry for
the on-list noise. Andrew
andrew cooke said:
[...]
> Halipeto generates web pages from templates (much like JSP, Zope TAL etc).
> It's written in Haske
> alex:
> > Is there a maximum memory GHC can use/reach?
> > Specifically, can GHC address more than 4gb of
> > memory?
>
> SimonM may want to comment, but at the moment I think GHC is
> limited to
> 4G, but only due to lack of 64bit machines/demand on the developers.
>
> If you look in ghc/rt
Hi,
Halipeto generates web pages from templates (much like JSP, Zope TAL etc).
It's written in Haskell (with a ghc extension) and is available from
http://www.acooke.org/jara/halipeto
An example site generated using Halipeto, containing some Pancito images,
is at http://www.acooke.org/pancito -
Hello all,
Is anybody using GHC's backend as a backend for their own compiler?
In the paper "An external representation for the GHC Core Language" the
introduction states that "there are many (undocumented) idiosyncracies in
the way GHC produces Core from source Haskell". And that "it will be har
[ posted on behalf of Benaissa, Zino <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]
CALL FOR WORKSHOP PROPOSALS
-
Third International Conference on
Generative Programming and Component E
On 13 Feb 2004, Ketil Malde wrote:
> Axel Simon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > I wonder if such an effort is worthwhile. If all pointers are suddenly
> > twice the size then the footprint of a program roughly doubles.
> > [...]
> > It would be interesting if Haskell programs could run in the
Axel Simon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> There is an IA64 port somewhere, and I suspect other 64-bit
>> architectures as well. Presumably they support >4Gb?
> I wonder if such an effort is worthwhile. If all pointers are suddenly
> twice the size then the footprint of a program roughly doubles.
Axel Simon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> There is an IA64 port somewhere, and I suspect other 64-bit
>> architectures as well. Presumably they support >4Gb?
> I wonder if such an effort is worthwhile. If all pointers are suddenly
> twice the size then the footprint of a program roughly doubles.
On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 10:20:43AM +0100, Ketil Malde wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Donald Bruce Stewart) writes:
>
> > SimonM may want to comment, but at the moment I think GHC is limited to
> > 4G, but only due to lack of 64bit machines/demand on the developers.
>
> There is an IA64 port somewher
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Donald Bruce Stewart) writes:
> SimonM may want to comment, but at the moment I think GHC is limited to
> 4G, but only due to lack of 64bit machines/demand on the developers.
There is an IA64 port somewhere, and I suspect other 64-bit
architectures as well. Presumably they sup
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