Hello Brian,
Tuesday, June 13, 2006, 1:11:37 AM, you wrote:
data UTF8Stream h = (ByteStream h) = UTF8Stream h
instance TextStream (UTF8Stream h) ...
addUTF8Encoding :: h - (UTF8Stream h)
and so on. currently i should add type constraint to each and every
class and function i declared.
Ketil Malde wrote:
Now you see it, now you don't. :-/
* .a files in /local/lib/foo-0.0/ghc-/ -- check
* .a files named libfoo.a -- check
* -lfoo on the command line -- check
Using strace shows that the .a file is indeed being read by ghc, but I
still get
Thanks for all the replies - this has helped a lot!
ChadOn 6/12/06, Chad Scherrer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok, so I'm doing things somewhat backward. I've been using Haskell for
a while now, whenever I get a chance to. But in order to become more
involved in high-performance computing projects at
Hallo
I search a code for
elements_in_List([1,2],[1,2]).
True
elements_in_List([1,8],[1,2,3,4,8]).
True
elements_in_List([2,1],[1,2]).
True
elements_in_List([1,1],[1]).
False
I have a code
elements_in_List :: Eq a = [a] - [a] - Bool
elements_in_List [] _ = True
elements_in_List _ [] =
Hi folks,
I just installed the May 2006 release of Hugs. When I use the
command-line version, the '$$' symbol to reference the last expression
works fine. It does not work in WinHugs, but yields 'ERROR - Syntax
error in expression (unexpected symbol $$)'. I typed ':set' to verify
the '-r$$'
On 6/13/06, Jenny678 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hallo
I search a code for
elements_in_List([1,2],[1,2]).
True
elements_in_List([1,8],[1,2,3,4,8]).
True
elements_in_List([2,1],[1,2]).
True
elements_in_List([1,1],[1]).
False
I have a code
elements_in_List :: Eq a = [a] - [a] - Bool
On 6/14/06, Jenny678 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hallo
I search a code for
elements_in_List([1,2],[1,2]).
True
elements_in_List([1,8],[1,2,3,4,8]).
True
elements_in_List([2,1],[1,2]).
True
elements_in_List([1,1],[1]).
False
I have a code
elements_in_List :: Eq a = [a] - [a] - Bool
Hi Lyle,
I just installed the May 2006 release of Hugs. When I use the
command-line version, the '$$' symbol to reference the last expression
works fine. It does not work in WinHugs, but yields 'ERROR - Syntax
error in expression (unexpected symbol $$)'. I typed ':set' to verify
the '-r$$'