magr:
> Hallo all,
>
> version 1.0 of package rdtsc has just been released.
>
Very nice.
I've attached some small patches:
a) to move the src into System.CPUTime.Rdtsc (more intuitive space)
b) move C src into cbits dir (standard name)
Good work,
Don
New patches:
[update cabal fi
The very nice Buckwalter and Denney dimensional-numbers packages both
work on a fixed set of base dimensions. This is a significant
restriction for me--I want to avoid adding apples to oranges as well
as avoiding adding meters to grams. Is it possible to have an
extensible set of base dimensions
On Tue, 02 Jan 2007 04:22:23 +0100, Donald Bruce Stewart
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
* edwinb: I've just walked past a poster advertising a gig by a band
called 'The Awkward Squad'. I assume this means they provide
output, play concurrently, and people take exception to the
On Jan 2, 2007, at 0:08 , Martin Huschenbett wrote:
Hi,
my aim is to transform an XML file into C++ source code with a
Haskell program. The part that parses the XML is already finished
(using HaXML) but the part that generates the C++ code is still
remaining. Is there already any work on
Are the mtl and monads (monadLib) packages both in active use? Is one being
phased out? - Conal
___
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
Mark Goldman wrote:
> I am trying to write a toy echo server that can handle multiple
> connections. I would like to be able to test and see if there are any
> connections waiting to be accepted on a socket. In C and related
> languages I would use something like select or poll to be nice to the
On 1/2/07, Martin Grabmueller wrote:
version 1.0 of package rdtsc has just been released.
This small package contains one module called 'Rdtsc.Rdtsc'.
This module provides the function 'rdtsc' for accessing
the 'rdtsc' machine register on modern IA-32 processors.
Very nice!
I have a few commen
Hallo all,
version 1.0 of package rdtsc has just been released.
This small package contains one module called 'Rdtsc.Rdtsc'.
This module provides the function 'rdtsc' for accessing
the 'rdtsc' machine register on modern IA-32 processors. This is
a 64-bit counter which counts the number of proce
On Jan 2, 2007, at 1:48 AM, Bulat Ziganshin wrote:
btw, may be the following can help you:
http://www.inf.ufes.br/~ffranzosi/BSPHlib-0.1.tar.gz
Thanks Bulat. I don't know what this is, though, and the link is broken.
--
http://wagerlabs.com/
_
On Jan 2, 2007, at 8:33 AM, Simon Peyton-Jones wrote:
GdH is maintained and distributed by Phil Trinder and his
colleagues at Heriot Watt. I think it's still alive, but it's
based on a much earlier version of GHC.
I wonder how much work would it be to integrate it. Also, their
servers a
Hello Joel,
Monday, January 1, 2007, 9:28:05 PM, you wrote:
> Is anyone using GdH?
> Can someone tell me why it's not part of the GHC distribution?
> It seems that GdH is not being developed anymore and I think it's a
> real pity!
ghc sources are open, so anyone can build his own GHC extensi
Hi Thomas,
You wrote:
How do I "import" Control.Monad.ST so I can experiment with it from
ghci and just do
runST
like you had. Instead of qualifying it in some way.
In GHCi, use the :module command (:m) for built-in
modules, and :load and :add for source files.
In Hugs, use :load and :also f
GdH is maintained and distributed by Phil Trinder and his colleagues at Heriot
Watt. I think it's still alive, but it's based on a much earlier version of
GHC.
If it's parallelism you're after, GHC (as distributed) runs on shared-memory
multi-processors. But we don't have anything like GdH or
13 matches
Mail list logo