On 08/02/2012 02:26, John Meacham wrote:
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 4:24 AM, Simon Marlowmarlo...@gmail.com wrote:
Separately the unix package added support for undecoded FilePaths
(RawFilePath), but unfortunately at the same time we started using a new
extension in GHC 7.4.1 (CApiFFI), which we
Did you run cabal clean before rebuilding with Git Bash? And can you post
the exact runtime error you get?
2012/2/8 Alberto G. Corona agocor...@gmail.com
I switched to Git bash and the runtime error produced by the library
is the same.
This error may be produced because the configuration it
Hello Thomas,
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 4:03 AM, Thomas Tuegel ttue...@gmail.com wrote:
First, as author of the test suite code, let me apologize for the
terrible documentation.
This is absolutely NOT how coverage reports are supposed to work. If
you configure with '--enable-tests
yes i did it,.
the error is as follows:
shop.exe: NetworkSocket.hsc:(948,3)-(1007,23): Non-exhaustive patterns in case
I will download network form hackage and will do it form the beginning. .
2012/2/8 Holger Reinhardt hreinha...@gmail.com:
Did you run cabal clean before rebuilding with Git
On 07/02/2012 22:56, Richard O'Keefe wrote:
On 8/02/2012, at 2:11 AM, Steve Horne wrote:
To be fair, field OF record isn't bad in that sense. However, it would defeat
the purpose of TDNR - the record isn't first, and therefore cannot be used (given a
left-to-right typing direction) as a
Thanks Thomas, that new flag is great.
Mike Craig
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 10:03 PM, Thomas Tuegel ttue...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 3:23 PM, Austin Seipp mad@gmail.com wrote:
If you're writing a library, you need to compile the library with
`-fhpc`, i.e. put it in the
For three days I can't compile dependencies for my project using
yesod, yesod-auth, yesod-persistent, persistent-template,
persistent-sqlite, persistent. When I varied version I received a
variety of broken dependencies: persistent (0.6.* vs 0.7.*), conduit
(0.1.* vs 0.2.*), conduit-pool,
Hello, I'm wondering what's the best strategy to use in the following scenario:
- 2 threads
- One perform some work that will take time, possibly go on forever
- Another waits for user input (like commands from the keyboard)
that affects thread 1 (causing it to stop, in the simplest case)
You could use throwTo to raise an exception in the thread you want to
stop. Otherwise, having some variable (IORef, TVar, MVar) that the
long running thread occasionally checks seems like a good solution.
Erik
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 17:04, JP Moresmau jpmores...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello, I'm
Why do you think it's a lot? MVar are a teeny tiny and convenient primitive
of communication, and I don't see why they wouldn't suit your need.
Sure a throwTo would do the trick... But they're is do the trick and do
the job, you see?
Using STM and TVars *would* be kind of overkill.
2012/2/8 JP
Having discussed the issue privately with Alberto, I've found another bug
and updated my pull request [1]. Using that code it should be possible to
build the network library on Windows using MSys on GHC 7.4.1.
[1] https://github.com/haskell/network/pull/25
2012/2/8 Alberto G. Corona
On Tue, Feb 07, 2012 at 06:26:48PM -0800, John Meacham wrote:
Hi, from my reading, it looks like 'capi' means from a logical perspective,
Don't assume the object is addressible, but rather that the standard c syntax
for calling this routine will expand into correct code when compiled with
I will merge this as soon as I get back from vacation.
On Feb 8, 2012 8:54 AM, Holger Reinhardt hreinha...@gmail.com wrote:
Having discussed the issue privately with Alberto, I've found another bug
and updated my pull request [1]. Using that code it should be possible to
build the network
No, I meant they seem to be mainly for the use case where the reading
thread blocks for more input, and maybe there's a simpler/more
efficient way to quickly check if an event has occurred, that's all.
If there isn't then a MVar it will be.
JP
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 7:35 PM, Yves Parès
If you only need one structure for communication (e.g. neither thread
needs to lock multiple things) you might consider using an IORef, and
writing/polling it with atomicModifyIORef. It's cheaper than an MVar
for the case where you don't need to lock multiple threads.
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 2:45
Hi,
I've been in the past told that mersenne-random was much better than the
standard random package.
However, System.Random.Mersenne doesn't follow the general API described in
System.Random, MTGen is not an instance of RandomGen.
But a sample on System.Random.Mersenne.getStdRandom documentation
On 8/02/2012, at 14:16, Steve Horne sh006d3...@blueyonder.co.uk wrote:
I haven't given a lot of thought to updates.
I very much fail to see the point of replacing prefix function application with
postfix dots, merely for field selection. There are already some imperfect,
but adequate,
On 9/02/2012, at 3:16 AM, Steve Horne wrote:
On 07/02/2012 22:56, Richard O'Keefe wrote:
On 8/02/2012, at 2:11 AM, Steve Horne wrote:
To be fair, field OF record isn't bad in that sense. However, it would
defeat the purpose of TDNR - the record isn't first, and therefore cannot
be
record.field (read record, oops, I only want part of it.)
I would read this record's field
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On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 2:47 PM, Malcolm Wallace malcolm.wall...@me.com wrote:
On 8/02/2012, at 14:16, Steve Horne sh006d3...@blueyonder.co.uk wrote:
I haven't given a lot of thought to updates.
I very much fail to see the point of replacing prefix function application
with postfix dots,
How about § then? Surely at this late date we can allow ourselves *one*
non-ASCII character?
The very name of it (*section* sign) suggests taking a part; and if you are
totally in love
with dot, think of it as a dot with ponytails.
I suggest record的field, or record之field for the more
On 9/02/2012, at 1:26 PM, Evan Laforge wrote:
How about § then? Surely at this late date we can allow ourselves *one*
non-ASCII character?
The very name of it (*section* sign) suggests taking a part; and if you are
totally in love
with dot, think of it as a dot with ponytails.
I
I chose the most available non-ASCII character I could
find. Set the criterion to be present in most ISO 8-bit
character sets and there are really only two candidates,
section sign and degrees sign. ...
Brilliant! We'll use degrees sign for function composition
(so that it follows the
Welcome to issue 214 the HWN, a newsletter covering stories, questions,
and remarks seen around the web during the week of January 29 to
February 4, 2012.
You can find the HTML version at:
http://contemplatecode.blogspot.com/2012/02/haskell-weekly-news-issue-214.html
Quotes of the Week
*
Are you talking about starting a new site, or running an existing
site? For a new site, it's probably a good idea to wait until 0.10
comes out, as it includes a lot of nice enhancements, and we'll be
releasing it this week. If an existing site, you probably need to have
more strict upper bounds on
It appears to me that the MonadPlus instance for ListT breaks the
following MonadPlus law
m mzero = mzero
I've tried with every implementation of ListT I could find - the one
in mtl, transformers, List, even ListT done right and it's
alternative. They all seem to violate the above law.
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