Why do Haskell programmers (and libraries) name their function like @ or
###?Why not use a more descriptive label for functions?
Daryoush
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On Jul 17, 2009, at 15:06 , Daryoush Mehrtash wrote:
Why do Haskell programmers (and libraries) name their function like
@ or ###?Why not use a more descriptive label for functions?
Because symbols can be used as infix functions directly, whereas
alphanumerics have to be wrapped in ``
dmehrtash:
Why do Haskell programmers (and libraries) name their function like @ or
#
##?Why not use a more descriptive label for functions?
Where are those functions defined??
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System.Console.Curses? Sorry couldn't resist ...
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 12:18 PM, Don Stewartd...@galois.com wrote:
dmehrtash:
Why do Haskell programmers (and libraries) name their function like @ or
#
##? Why not use a more descriptive label for functions?
Where are those functions
Am Freitag, 17. Juli 2009 21:06 schrieb Daryoush Mehrtash:
Why do Haskell programmers (and libraries) name their function like @
or ###?Why not use a more descriptive label for functions?
It’s for the same reason that mathematicians say 2 + 3 instead of plus(2,3):
it’s more readable at