On 10/2/13 4:55 PM, Omari Norman wrote:
I'm pleased to make the first public announcement of the availability of
Penny, a double-entry command-line accounting system.
Hurrah! Congrats Omari.
Will there be a 1.0 release, or will you be forever chasing that number
like me ?
I'm pleased to announce the hackage release of FunGEn 0.4!
(Actually 0.4.2 as my 0.4 announcement did not reach the mail lists.)
FunGEn (Functional Game Engine) is a BSD-licensed, cross-platform,
OpenGL/GLUT-based, imperative game engine/framework. With very few
dependencies and two example
. your change will appear at http://hub.darcs.net/simon/darcsden/patches
8. discuss on #darcs, or ping me (sm, si...@joyful.com) to merge it
Credits
---
Alex Suraci created darcsden. Simon Michael led this release, which
includes contributions from Alp Mestanogullari, Jeffrey Chu, Ganesh
I'm pleased to announce hledger and hledger-web 0.21!
hledger is a command-line tool and haskell library for tracking
financial transactions, which are stored in a human-readable plain
text format. In addition to reporting, it can also help you record new
transactions, or convert CSV data from
I'm pleased to announce hledger and hledger-web 0.20!
hledger is a command-line tool and haskell library for tracking
financial transactions, which are stored in a human-readable plain
text format. In addition to reporting, it can also help you record new
transactions, or convert CSV data from
Hi Brent,
hledger is an existing project whose purpose, code and installation
process is relatively simple. I'm happy to do a bit of mentoring. If
this sounds suitable, I can suggest some easy fixes or enhancements, eg:
...hmm. In fact nothing on my long wishlist[1][2] looks all that quick.
[4] http://hub.darcs.net/simon/rss2irc/browse/NOTES.org
On 3/12/13 2:13 PM, Simon Michael wrote:
Hi Brent,
hledger is an existing project whose purpose, code and installation
process is relatively simple. I'm happy to do a bit of mentoring. If
this sounds suitable, I can suggest some easy
I'm pleased to announce a new release of rss2irc, the software behind
hackagebot on #haskell. rss2irc is an IRC bot that polls an RSS or Atom feed
and announces updates to an IRC channel, with options for customizing output
and behavior. It aims to be an easy-to-use, reliable, well-behaved
People have put a lot of work into regular expression libraries on
haskell. Yet it seems very few of them provide a replace/substitute
function - just regex-compat and regepr as far as I know. Why is that ?
#haskell says:
sclv iirc its because that's a really mutatey operation in the
underlying c
I'm pleased to announce the release of shelltestrunner 1.3. New in
this release:
* support latest Diff, cmdargs, test-framework; tested with GHC 7.6.1
(Magnus Therning)
* fix unicode handling on GHC = 7.2
shelltestrunner tests command-line programs (or arbitrary shell
commands.)
It reads
hledger-web now supports GHC 7.6 properly (no more Prelude.read: no
parse error).
Release notes:
* fix Prelude.read: no parse errors with GHC = 7.6
* web lib refactoring, easier scripting/developing
Thanks!
-Simon
hledger is a command-line tool and haskell library for tracking
I'm pleased to announce hledger-web 0.19, compatible with the latest
hledger and Yesod.
Release notes:
* web: builds with yesod 1.1.3
* web: obeys command-line query options at startup again
* the autogenerated session file is now a dot file
(.hledger-web_client_session.aes)
hledger
|
+---++--+--++
build version is set with CPP instead of cabal-file-th
Release contributors: Simon Michael, Sergei Trofimovich
Release stats: 106 days, 21 commits, 1 end-user fix, 0 end-user features since
last release
Project stats: 222 unit functional tests
Email.. advanced alien technology that some day I will master.
Here are more readable versions:
http://hub.darcs.net/simon/darcsden-1.0/browse/ANNOUNCE.md
http://hub.darcs.net/simon/hub.darcs.net-conf/browse/ANNOUNCE.md
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Hi Nathan,
cool. You should get your blog added to http://planet.haskell.org/ , see instructions there. And if you think wiki links
are needed, the games development page(s) could be a good place.
Looking forward to reading,
-Simon
___
supported GHC versions
* extensive API, test and internal cleanups
Stats:
- Release contributors: Simon Michael, xiaoruoruo
- 87 days, 155 commits, 6 end-user features and 3 end-user bug fixes
since last major release
- 216 unit functional tests (hledger-lib hledger)
- 7836 lines of code
Well said!
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On 5/12/12 5:52 AM, Sönke Hahn wrote:
Hi all!
Yesterday I wrote a little tool to output the dependencies of darcs
patches in dot format. The hardest part was to wrap my head around the
darcs API and find a way to let it compute the patch dependencies. I
don't know, if I got it right, but it
Great work! Thanks.
Does it include only packages without executables ? Eg I see hledger-lib but not the hledger or gist packages. It would
be nice to have all of hackage there.
Best - Simon
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With 2.8 released, I felt Darcs deserves better presentation. After surveying other VCS sites I worked on an update to
our home page layout and content over the last few days, with review and input from #darcs, and it went live last night.
It's far from perfect but I hope it's a good step
Thanks for the feedback Paul (and Michael), all such is very useful.
Maybe I'll try Django-green... :)
- there is a video right on the first page, good ! Unfortunatly, it is
not showing darcs but its cousin. Also, the title is why do we
continue to develop ... [camp], which isn't the
Hear hear, that is looking great. Thanks,
-Simon
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I'm pleased to announce the release of shelltestrunner 1.2. Also, in
case you missed it
there's a survey where you can help steer the project (below).
shelltestrunner tests command-line programs (or arbitrary shell
commands.)
It reads simple declarative tests specifying a command, some input, and
/ccc?key=0Au47MrJax8HpdFN5dllFTGFFU3ZhclcxWTZFNEludlEpli=1#gid=3
Summary:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/gform?key=0Au47MrJax8HpdFN5dllFTGFFU3ZhclcxWTZFNEludlEgridId=3#chart
Thanks for the excellent feedback.
-Simon
On Feb 23, 2012, at 7:13 PM, Simon Michael wrote:
Hey all,
I'm
I have uploaded a new version of cabal-file-th which bumps the Cabal upper
bound to avoid difficulties with GHC 7.4.
Best - Simon
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Hey all,
I'm gathering usage data on my main FOSS projects, to help me prioritize and
steer them. I've prepared a short survey, 10 optional questions that should
take 1-5 minutes per project. If you use any of these projects and/or would
like them to continue, you can help a lot by adding your
Happy new year all. hledger and hledger-web 0.17 are released. Not quite as
planned, this release mainly fixes bugs and updates dependencies. Also the
hledger-vty and hledger-chart packages have been demoted to unmaintained
extras for now to save time.
hledger is a library, command-line tool,
Aha, thanks both.
The haskell organisation looks bigger, I think I'd like to upload feed there. Could the owner add contact info or a
how-to-join note to the page ?
-Simon
On 1/10/12 12:22 PM, David Terei wrote:
There is also:
https://github.com/haskell
where a bunch of us are hosting
deprecated in favor of xml-conduit. My
guess is you'll be able to migrate to the latter by just changing the
package name in your cabal file.
On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 8:54 PM, Simon Michael si...@joyful.com wrote:
Hi Sigbjorn (and Don),
I'm back for another reason. feed leaks and uses a lot
to the main
repo or a branch or fork. Otherwise I'll need to get them to your repo somehow.
Thanks again,
-Simon
On Feb 21, 2011, at 5:14 PM, Simon Michael wrote:
thanks for feed. I'm just investigating a bug with rss2irc, and I think I'm
seeing problems in the current feed on hackage
Did someone mention hakyll already ? For the record, this is a nice recent blog
built with it:
http://www.skybluetrades.net/posts/2011/10/21/hakyll-setup.html
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On 10/25/11 1:27 PM, Captain Freako wrote:
Are the archives of this list searchable?
http://news.gmane.org/group/gmane.comp.lang.haskell.cafe . A newsreader like
thunderbird makes searching especially quick.
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rather than actor messages.
Best,
- Simon
On Oct 12, 2011, at 8:44 AM, Simon Michael wrote:
Hi Alex, thanks for the reply (it didn't seem to reach haskell-cafe, if that
matters) and the update on status. I passed over CloudHaskell as it seemed
(a) over-complex for my needs and (b) not ready, eg
Hi Alexander,
I went looking for something to clean up rss2irc's thread management, and your
recently released thespian package looks like the simplest, most practical
actors/erlang/OTP-ish lib for haskell so far. Thanks!
I need to restart threads (actors) in a controlled way when they die or
I believe this release of hledger-web is really and truly installable from
hackage. Thanks for the problem reports! Details at
http://hledger.org/NEWS.html .
On Oct 1, 2011, at 10:22 AM, Simon Michael wrote:
I'm pleased to announce version 0.16 of the hledger packages. This is a
stability
On 10/2/11 10:12 AM, Arnaud Bailly wrote:
No problem ! BTW, have you ever thought of coupling hledger with git for saving
a ledger ? There is ongoing work to
provide a native git interface.
Yes, Clint Adams has begun adapting it to use the filestore (rcs abstraction layer) lib, and this is a
I have reopened http://code.google.com/p/hledger/issues/detail?id=63 . Sorry for the breakage. I thought I had this
working once but I'm not sure how!
-Simon
On 10/1/11 10:36 PM, Arnaud Bailly wrote:
Thanks Simon. Unfortunately, I got the same error.
On Sun, Oct 2, 2011 at 2:50 AM, Simon
word' patterns
* web: hide old title and search form when adding/editing
* web: adjust --help to indicate command-line arguments are not expected
* web: don't bother running cli unit tests at startup
Stats:
- Release contributors: Simon Michael
- 30 days, 100 commits, 4 end-user
Thanks for the report Arnaud. Can you try again with cabal install hledger-web -fproduction ? That flag is supposed to
be default but it sounds like I messed up.
-Simon
On 10/1/11 1:42 PM, Arnaud Bailly wrote:
Hello,
I installed hledger and tried installing hledger-web but got the following
Hi Sebastian,
On Sep 12, 2011, at 4:24 AM, Sebastian Fischer wrote:
https://github.com/sebfisch/haskell-barchart/blob/v0.1.1.1/src/barchart.hs
for an example of different modes that share most but not all of their
options. IIRC, it works because in the list of exec modes later items
, Hledger.Vty and Hledger.Chart
modules
* the basic reports are now provided by hledger-lib for easier
reuse
* new api use examples: `equity.hs`, `uniquify.hs`
* some old base 3 support has been dropped
* the old -s flag has been dropped
Stats:
Release contributors: Simon Michael
and Hledger.Chart
modules
* the basic reports are now provided by hledger-lib for easier
reuse
* new api use examples: `equity.hs`, `uniquify.hs`
* some old base 3 support has been dropped
* the old -s flag has been dropped
Stats:
Release contributors: Simon Michael, Trygve Laugstøl, Dmitry
Thanks Conrad! Those are some great links.
I wrapped up some manpage generation code in a package called
ui-command, which is kind of orthogonal to cmdargs (ui-command just
deals with subcommands). Example commands are often useful, so I added
Interesting. Have you tried using both ui-command
I'm pleased to announce shelltestrunner 1.1.
shelltestrunner tests command-line programs or arbitrary shell
commands. It reads simple declarative tests specifying a command,
some input, and the expected output, error output and exit status.
Tests can be run selectively, in parallel, with a
When I split up the hledger package, I always intended to make the hledger
program act as a single front end for hledger-* executables. I finally got
around to trying that, just pushed to darcs [1]. So hledger now searches your
PATH at startup and offer any hledger-* executables as subcommands.
Hi Neil,
I just spent a day converting hledger from getopt to cmdargs. cmdargs
feels more high level and featureful and nicer. And yet... I haven't
reduced the line count that much - nothing like your HLint 3:1 ratio.
And, I may have made things worse for myself in the reuse/avoiding
I'm pleased to announce the 1.0 release of shelltestrunner!
Home page: http://joyful.com/repos/shelltestrunner
Install: $ cabal install shelltestrunner
shelltestrunner tests command-line programs or arbitrary shell
commands. It reads simple declarative tests specifying a command,
some input,
How about a small gui for entering hledger transactions.
Level 1: present a form like the current web form[1] and append the data
to a journal file[2].
Level 2: allow more account posting fields to be added on the fly, for
posting to more than two accounts.
Level 3: populate the account
On 6/23/11 10:49 AM, Iustin Pop wrote:
FYI, a regular link (though longer) seems more appropriate to me.
Don't know if other people feel the same though.
+1
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I like the goal of the stability field, but I don't know how to use it.
Is it intended to track a package's overall maturity ? Eg:
experimental - alpha - beta - almost ready - stable - mature - obsolete
Or, since many packages have multiple major and minor releases, to track the
current
Hey now.. maybe so, but this thread is an interesting one.
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On 5/10/11 2:52 PM, Roman Cheplyaka wrote:
You could read hledger[1] sources for inspiration: it's written in
Haskell and contains some (quite generic) currency parsing.
Hi Eric.. here's the code in question:
On 4/21/11 10:16 PM, wren ng thornton wrote:
rather, what I'd like is someplace to keep my code which also provides a
good bugtracker. Unfortunately, neither darcsden nor patchtag offer
darcsden does include a simple issue tracker now.
___
patterns with spaces if quoted, like command line
* web: make edit form more cross-browser compatible, fixing it in
firefox (#38)
* web: move hidden add/edit/import forms below main content to help
text-mode browsers a bit (#33)
Release contributors: Simon Michael, Dmitry Astapov, Eric Kow
+1 to what you said.
On 4/21/11 4:16 PM, John Meacham wrote:
Incidentally, I wrote a github like site based around darcs a few
years ago at codehole.org. It is just used internally by me for
certain projects. but if people were interested, I could resume work
on it and make it public.
John,
On 2/11/11 8:42 PM, trysta...@comcast.net wrote:
Any advice, comments, or questions are welcome.
Hi Trystan.. it looks great. I like the rubyish brevity and readability. Please
do publish on hackage.
What should we read to find out more about this style of tests,
http://rspec.info ?
When
Hi Andre, good to hear from you.
On Feb 13, 2011, at 5:27 PM, Andre Wilson Brotto Furtado wrote:
This is great, thanks Simon. I'm currently not involved in any
haskell projects anymore, but please do keep the ball rolling for
FunGEn.
I'm currenty exploring how domain-specific development
://hackage.haskell.org/package/FunGEn
Code and docs: http://darcsden.com/simon/fungen
Original home, more docs: http://www.cin.ufpe.br/~haskell/fungen
Best,
-Simon
On Feb 10, 2011, at 12:40 PM, Simon Michael wrote:
Hi Andre, wman.. you guys haven't been responding, but FYI #haskell-
game IRC channel
Thanks Lyndon,
On Feb 13, 2011, at 1:24 PM, Lyndon Maydwell wrote:
I've been working almost exclusively with GLUT because it seems to be
the only multi-platform graphics toolkit that works for me. This looks
great! It certainly seems to take the pain out of texture-loading
which always drives
Would it be worth re-exporting a type-aliased GLdouble to completely
hide the implementation?
PS, and now I understand more clearly - yes, you're quite right. I
meant to do that.
Perhaps some day it could use a graphics-and-IO abstraction layer
(like HaskGame).
On Feb 11, 2011, at 11:20 AM, Peter Simons wrote:
If hledger offers optional features by means of Cabal flags, then
users
of the library need the ability to depend on hledger with a specific
set
of features (flags) enabled or disabled, but unfortunately Cabal can't
do that.
The new approach
On 1/20/11 10:02 PM, Michael Snoyman wrote:
Couldn't you depend on either version of mtl?
I currently depend on mtl, no version.. am I missing your point ?
On 1/21/11 2:50 AM, Dmitry Astapov wrote:
something pulled in newer process in the process, which caused another
wave of rebuilds.
You mean mtl 2.*, right ?
Yes that is a problem. I'm nervous about requiring mtl 2 because when
I bumped hledger 0.13's process dependency to 0.14 for similar reasons
it made all kinds of trouble for folks who just want to install the
hledger core in standard/older haskell environments.
On Dec 9, 2010, at 3:35 AM, Peter Simons wrote:
you said that a dependency of one of those packages would require
process = 1.0.1.4. Now, what I don't understand is why you added
that restriction to hledger then?
Picture this common scenario, which I saw during installability
testing - you
On Dec 9, 2010, at 7:34 AM, Peter Simons wrote:
I can tell it's doing more harm than good. The situation right now is
that it's impossible to install hledger on ArchLinux -- not because
Why ?
I haven't yet heard why depending on the higher process version is a
problem.
On Dec 9, 2010, at 7:39 AM, Simon Michael wrote:
On Dec 9, 2010, at 7:34 AM, Peter Simons wrote:
that it's impossible to install hledger on ArchLinux -- not because
Why ?
I haven't yet heard why depending on the higher process version is a
problem.
Oh, is it because you are avoiding use
On Dec 8, 2010, at 5:58 AM, Peter Simons wrote:
do you by any chance remember which dependency that was? I wonder,
because I had no trouble compiling hledger 0.13's dependencies on a
standard GHC 6.12.3 system -- only hledger itself fails the cabal
configure stage --, so it seems to me like all
Hi Peter,
no reason as far as hledger and hledger-lib is concerned, but one of
the add-on packages, which depends on them, also requires process
1.0.1.4. If you install hledger or hledger-lib with the older version
of process, then cabal is not able to install the add-on package.
Sorry
On 12/6/10 7:25 AM, Duncan Coutts wrote:
cabal: The program 'pkg-config' is required but it could not be found
on the system (version 0.9.0 or later of pkg-config is required).
Looks good.
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I've released hledger 0.13, with readline editing and tab completion
from Judah Jacobson, more ledger compatibility, a more robust and
installable web interface, bugfixes, and a much-deliberated package
split.
Docs and mac and 64-bit linux binaries are at http://hledger.org , and
of
Current status of http://etherpad.osuosl.org/ohloh-darcs-support (http://bugs.darcs.net/issue1002): I got the ohloh_scm
darcs adapter tests passing and now we are awaiting review from Ohloh, which could take a while as they are still in
transition. If you wish, add your support to
Many of us are interested, and Ohloh is interested, in getting
ohloh.net to support darcs repositories directly. It doesn't look hard
to get good-enough support working; it just requires hacking 10 or so
simple, well-organised ruby files. I've made a start on github[1], and
set up a
PS I forgot to describe: Ohloh (http://ohloh.net) provides useful metadata, stats, rankings etc. for free/open-source
software projects, quite good for marketing and project management. Haskell projects and developers would benefit from
this, but have long been excluded because it does not yet
The status/how-to page has moved to a nicer url:
http://etherpad.osuosl.org/ohloh-darcs-support
5 of the 10 ohloh darcs adapter test files are now passing. Come and
help put us over the top.
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On 10/27/10 1:13 AM, Dmitry V'yal wrote:
Code I wrote works quite well for my purposes and I copied it into
several my programs. In order to make maintenance easier I recently
thought about uploading it to hackage. But given a wast amount of
half-dead packages with intersecting functionality
On 09/26/2010 09:41 PM, Alexander Solla wrote:
Remember to treat values, functions, and monadic actions as servers
that respond to your requests. This is the easiest way to maximize the
value of Haskell's laziness.
I haven't heard that one before. Could you give an example ?
On 09/23/2010 10:41 PM, Mitar wrote:
The other would be probably to implement/document configuration
(extra-lib-dir?) that Cabal (or GHC in general) first searches
system's library path (those against which GHC was compiled in Haskell
Platform) and if lib is not there goes for MacPorts or Fink's
On 9/16/10 9:44 AM, Bas van Dijk wrote:
I try to add NEWS files to my packages source repositories[1] but it
sure would be nice if this file was directly shown on hackage.
Agreed. For now I sometimes put the most recent release notes in the description, like
I'm pleased to announce hledger 0.12.1, with a new web interface and
bugfixes. Thanks to Ben Boeckel and David Patrick for their help this
time around. Installation docs, linux/mac/windows binaries and more
are at http://hledger.org and http://hackage.haskell.org/package/
hledger .
Hi Brent,
ditto what Jeremy said. hledger is an end-user app with lots of needs including code design review, performance and
laziness analysis, quickcheck/smallcheck testing, development process refinement, web design, and features/fixes of all
sizes. I'd be happy to mentor volunteers.
I've been banging my head on the same issues. To summarise: GHC 6.12 strings are unicode; unix file paths are slightly
restricted byte strings; the former is used to represent the latter, leading to great confusion; the best way to fix it
is unclear. Here's a workaround I wrote this morning:
hledger 0.11 is released! Thanks to all testers and to Michael Snoyman
for much help keeping up with Yesod.
Best,
-Simon
home: http://hledger.org
Release notes:
2010/07/17 hledger 0.11
* split --help, adding --help-options and --help-all/-H, and make
it the
On 7/16/10 9:36 PM, Ivan Lazar Miljenovic wrote:
Michael Litchardmich...@schmong.org writes:
cabal: dependencies conflict: happstack-server-0.5.1 requires time ==1.1.4
however
time-1.1.4 was excluded because happstack-server-0.5.1 requires time ==1.2.0.3
I did battle with this one today.
Wow. I would instantly download anything that page cared to offer. :)
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On 6/24/10 4:24 PM, Andy Georges wrote:
Or if any of you out there have (recent) apps with inputs that are open
source ... let us know.
Hi Andy.. you could run the hledger benchmarks, roughly like so:
$ cabal install tabular
$ darcs get --lazy http://joyful.com/repos/hledger
$ cd hledger
$
hledger 0.10 is released, with installation and bug fixes and api
improvements.
Best,
-Simon
home: http://hledger.org
Release notes:
2010/05/23 hledger 0.10
* fix too-loose testpack dependency, missing safe dependency
* fix ghc 6.12 compatibility with -fweb
On 5/7/10 10:49 AM, Max Bolingbroke wrote:
* There is a new command line option (--plain), which tells the test
runner to avoid using any ANSI features - this can be handy if you are
(for example) viewing test output in Emacs
Thanks! I'll use that in the next release of shelltestrunner.
Re the auto-recompiling part, here is one of my favourite tools. I have used it to auto-build happstack, yesod and
hakyll apps/sites:
# continuous integration - recompile and restart
# whenever a module changes. sp is from searchpath.org, you might
# need the patched version from
On 4/9/10 11:48 AM, Jose A. Ortega Ruiz wrote:
Maybe i'm not understanding the problem, but cannot you just accumulate
the output in an auxiliary variable and parse the ouput as a whole once
the darcs process finishes?
I think no, because it is driving darcs interactively to select hunks - it
I'm pleased to announce a new release of shelltestrunner, a tool which
aims to make testing command-line programs easy. Thanks to Bernie Pope
for contributing features and valuable feedback.
Example:
$ cabal install shelltestrunner
...
$ cat - a.test
# a simple test - run cat, provide
I'm pleased to announce a new hledger release, with many bugfixes and
small improvements, GHC 6.12 support, and a separate library package
to make building (h)ledger-compatible tools easier.
Thanks to Oliver Braun and Gwern Branwen for code contributions this
release.
Just in time for tax
With Christian's blessing, I have taken over maintenance of darcsum and
would like to announce the 1.2 release:
darcs get http://joyful.com/repos/darcsum -t 1.2
darcsum is an occasionally fragile but tremendously useful emacs ui for
darcs. There is also vc-darcs.el, but I am quite productive
On 4/7/10 9:53 AM, Thomas Schilling wrote:
Yup, I have to agree. The Ruby web site certainly is the best web
site for a programming language that I've come across, but it's
certainly not amazing. I like the python documentation design, but
their home page is a bit dull. Anyway, here's another
On 4/7/10 12:33 PM, Duncan Coutts wrote:
The importance of this is that it lets us develop improved testsuite
interfaces in future. At the moment there are two test interfaces we
want to support. One is the simple unix style exit code + stdout
interface. This is good because it is a lowest
On 4/2/10 5:28 AM, Thomas Schilling wrote:
How about something more colourful?
http://i.imgur.com/7jCPq.png
No-one replied to this, but I like it. You sacrificed some information density for a simple, engaging, low-stress page
(which can still rotate in new content frequently). Anything
Well said.
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Roman C. has cleverly added hledger to the list of topics for this
weekend's ZuriHac. I will be working remotely at least on sunday
(PDT), and available to support where possible. You are invited to
join us! Some ideas -
- add Chart or google charts to the web ui
- smarter add/convert
We just had a big old web dev discussion in #darcs, which made me want to hang out in #haskell-web and hear more of the
same. I think it existed briefly and died, but maybe it's time to try again ?
Normally I don't like removing interesting chat from the main channel, but #haskell is often
Thank you, how does it compare to HStringTemplate ?
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Hi Kevin,
I just wanted to say that's a very nice analogy. Thanks!
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