Re: Why isn't there a FAQ? (was: Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?)

2008-01-28 Thread Henning Thielemann
On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, Tim Chevalier wrote: > I thought that the .wav file that Jeremy linked to should go in the > Haskell FAQ, if there was one, but it doesn't seem to exist. There's a > comp.lang.functional FAQ (that isn't maintained anymore) with a > section on Haskell, and a GHC FAQ, but no ge

Re: code.haskell.org vs darcs.haskell.org (was [Haskell-cafe] Enterprise Haskell AMQP library)

2008-01-28 Thread Henning Thielemann
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Duncan Coutts wrote: > On Mon, 2008-01-28 at 10:57 +, Bayley, Alistair wrote: > > > I'm wondering what the relationship is (if any) between code.haskell.org > > and darcs.haskell.org. > > darcs.haskell.org hosts ghc, the core libs and many others. The server > is maintain

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread Jonathan Cast
On 28 Jan 2008, at 11:00 PM, Henning Thielemann wrote: On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, Jonathan Cast wrote: Or, to put it another way, the bugs Java's stack overflow is designed to catch are considered good style in Haskell. I consider explicit recursion in Haskell as bad style. One should use higher

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread Henning Thielemann
On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, Jonathan Cast wrote: > Or, to put it another way, the bugs Java's stack overflow is designed > to catch are considered good style in Haskell. I consider explicit recursion in Haskell as bad style. One should use higher order functions like 'map', 'fold', 'filter' and so on w

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Stephan Friedrichs
Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH wrote: On Jan 28, 2008, at 17:33 , Jamie Love wrote: Shouldn't haskell pick up that there is no 'mod' for Word8? I mean, shouldn't I get a nicer error message? Hm? mod works fine for Word8, unless you specify a multiple of the type's bound. I think it's still har

[Haskell-cafe] Re: Why isn't there a FAQ?

2008-01-28 Thread Henning Thielemann
On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, Tim Chevalier wrote: > I thought that the .wav file that Jeremy linked to should go in the > Haskell FAQ, if there was one, but it doesn't seem to exist. There's a > comp.lang.functional FAQ (that isn't maintained anymore) with a > section on Haskell, and a GHC FAQ, but no ge

Re: [Haskell-cafe] How to make GHC 6.6 and 6.8 co-exist -- was: First go at reactive programming

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Docker
stevelihn wrote: > In my brief experience with Ocaml's GODI, GODI has a way to specify > them in a so-called config package. The install package then reads > what it needs from the config package. In perl's CPAN shell, you can > specify them in the cpan config file (to some extent). > > I suggest

[Haskell-cafe] How to make GHC 6.6 and 6.8 co-exist -- was: First go at reactive programming

2008-01-28 Thread Steve Lihn
I want to raise this issue again since I disagreed (see quoted text below) that cabal-install can solve the problem of moving from one version to another completely. For most /pure/ packages, it is probably true. But for those packages that have external depedencies, this is hardly so. For example

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Anton van Straaten
Tim Chevalier wrote: On 1/28/08, Anton van Straaten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Tim Chevalier wrote: I suppose you would really want to ask Haskell Curry how *he* pronounced his name, but it's a bit late for that. Someone could ask Alonzo Church, Jr. how his one-time date pronounced her father'

Re: Why isn't there a FAQ? (was: Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?)

2008-01-28 Thread Derek Elkins
On Mon, 2008-01-28 at 18:54 -0800, Tim Chevalier wrote: > I thought that the .wav file that Jeremy linked to should go in the > Haskell FAQ, if there was one, but it doesn't seem to exist. There's a > comp.lang.functional FAQ (that isn't maintained anymore) with a > section on Haskell, and a GHC FA

Re: Why isn't there a FAQ? (was: Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?)

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
On 1/28/08, Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Jan 28, 2008, at 21:54 , Tim Chevalier wrote: > > > I thought that the .wav file that Jeremy linked to should go in the > > Haskell FAQ, if there was one, but it doesn't seem to exist. > > http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Cate

Re: Why isn't there a FAQ? (was: Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?)

2008-01-28 Thread Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH
On Jan 28, 2008, at 21:54 , Tim Chevalier wrote: I thought that the .wav file that Jeremy linked to should go in the Haskell FAQ, if there was one, but it doesn't seem to exist. http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Category:FAQ but it took me too much effort to find it, and it needs a fair amo

Why isn't there a FAQ? (was: Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?)

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
I thought that the .wav file that Jeremy linked to should go in the Haskell FAQ, if there was one, but it doesn't seem to exist. There's a comp.lang.functional FAQ (that isn't maintained anymore) with a section on Haskell, and a GHC FAQ, but no general Haskell FAQ. A google search for "haskell faq"

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
On 1/28/08, Anton van Straaten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Tim Chevalier wrote: > > I suppose you would really want to ask Haskell Curry how *he* > > pronounced his name, but it's a bit late for that. > > Someone could ask Alonzo Church, Jr. how his one-time date pronounced > her father's name: >

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Re: anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Dan Weston
James Russell wrote: Tim Chevalier gmail.com> writes: That is not correct. The second syllable does not rhyme with "fell". In fact, the correct pronunciation sounds like "hassle" with a 'k' inserted between the two syllables of that word. Exactly. But am I the only person who has ever seen "

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Anton van Straaten
Tim Chevalier wrote: I suppose you would really want to ask Haskell Curry how *he* pronounced his name, but it's a bit late for that. Someone could ask Alonzo Church, Jr. how his one-time date pronounced her father's name: http://importantshock.wordpress.com/2007/08/21/haskell-curry-yes-i-da

[Haskell-cafe] Re: anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread James Russell
Tim Chevalier gmail.com> writes: > > On 1/28/08, Jeremy Apthorp gmail.com> wrote: > > On 29/01/2008, Tim Chevalier gmail.com> wrote: > > > "Haskell", stress on the first syllable; the first syllable is like > > > the word "has" and the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa > > > where the

[Haskell-cafe] Re: anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Stefan Monnier
> *did* disagree with me was also named "Jeremy". How confusing. Are both "Jeremy"s pronounced identically? Stefan ___ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread Jonathan Cast
On 28 Jan 2008, at 10:07 AM, Neil Mitchell wrote: Hi ghc uses a pretty conventional stack AFAIK, and it is arbitrarily limited, but you can change the limit with +RTS options. GHC uses a conventional stack (in that you put stuff at the top, and take it off from the top), but it is not a con

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
On 1/28/08, Dan Weston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Jeremy Shaw wrote: > > I would say the best description of how I pronounce it (which may or > > may not be right): is like 'rascal' but with an h. Though, perhaps > > different people pronounce rascal differently than I do. > > I think to ease the

Re: [Haskell-cafe] NDP

2008-01-28 Thread Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH
On Jan 28, 2008, at 20:41 , Roman Leshchinskiy wrote: (.text+0x8d5): undefined reference to `__stginit_parallelzm1zi0zi0zi0_ControlziParallelziStrategies_' This is strange, I've never seen this. Can you please send me the exact commands you used to build ghc and package ndp and the compl

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Dan Weston
Jeremy Shaw wrote: I would say the best description of how I pronounce it (which may or may not be right): is like 'rascal' but with an h. Though, perhaps different people pronounce rascal differently than I do. I think to ease the acceptance of Haskell in the broader world we should spell it

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Jeremy Shaw
At Mon, 28 Jan 2008 17:06:58 -0800, Tim Chevalier wrote: > I should really read more carefully -- I see now that you weren't > trying to disagree with me by posting that clip, but the person who > *did* disagree with me was also named "Jeremy". How confusing. tehehe. For the record, I believe I

Re: [Haskell-cafe] NDP

2008-01-28 Thread Roman Leshchinskiy
Hi Stephan, is someone familiar with compiling ndp (nested data parallel Haskell), "Speed with less convenience"-version? Yes, me :-) Sorry for the late reply, it's been a long weekend here in Australia. I followed the guide at http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Data_Parallel_Haskell/Packa

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
On 1/28/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Well, unless you are French. Then you don't pronounce "H". The remaining > letters are pronounced according to the Règlements de l'Académie. Fair enough. I wouldn't want to be culturally insensitive, and should have said that my statement

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread jerzy . karczmarczuk
Tim Chevalier writes: "Haskell", stress on the first syllable; the first syllable is like the word "has" and the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa where the "e" is written. Sometimes you will hear people stress the second syllable, but that is not Preferred. == Well, unless you are

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
On 1/28/08, Tim Chevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 1/28/08, Jeremy Shaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello, > > > > If my sources are to be believed, the following clip contains Simon > > Peyton Jones saying 'Haskell' several times. > > > > http://www.n-heptane.com/nhlab/spj-haskell.wav >

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
On 1/28/08, Jeremy Shaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, > > If my sources are to be believed, the following clip contains Simon > Peyton Jones saying 'Haskell' several times. > > http://www.n-heptane.com/nhlab/spj-haskell.wav > I have listened to Simon (and other equally sage folks) say "Haske

[Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Jeremy Apthorp
On 29/01/2008, Tim Chevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 1/28/08, Jeremy Apthorp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On 29/01/2008, Tim Chevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > "Haskell", stress on the first syllable; the first syllable is like > > > the word "has" and the second syllable is prono

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Jeremy Shaw
Hello, If my sources are to be believed, the following clip contains Simon Peyton Jones saying 'Haskell' several times. http://www.n-heptane.com/nhlab/spj-haskell.wav j. At Tue, 29 Jan 2008 08:28:44 +0800 , [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > [1 ] > [1.1 ] >   > >

Re: code.haskell.org vs darcs.haskell.org (was [Haskell-cafe] Enterprise Haskell AMQP library)

2008-01-28 Thread Duncan Coutts
On Mon, 2008-01-28 at 10:57 +, Bayley, Alistair wrote: > I'm wondering what the relationship is (if any) between code.haskell.org > and darcs.haskell.org. darcs.haskell.org hosts ghc, the core libs and many others. The server is maintained by Galois. Because it hosts the most central bits of

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
On 1/28/08, Jeremy Apthorp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 29/01/2008, Tim Chevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > "Haskell", stress on the first syllable; the first syllable is like > > the word "has" and the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa > > where the "e" is written. > > > > Sometim

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Jeremy Apthorp
On 29/01/2008, Tim Chevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > "Haskell", stress on the first syllable; the first syllable is like > the word "has" and the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa > where the "e" is written. > > Sometimes you will hear people stress the second syllable, but that is >

Re: [Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread Tim Chevalier
"Haskell", stress on the first syllable; the first syllable is like the word "has" and the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa where the "e" is written. Sometimes you will hear people stress the second syllable, but that is not Preferred. Cheers, Tim -- Tim Chevalier * http://cs.pdx.edu/

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread Derek Elkins
On Mon, 2008-01-28 at 14:39 -0500, istarex wrote: > On Jan 28, 2008 1:07 PM, Neil Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > To answer the question if Haskell has a "stack depth restriction ... > > like Java" the answer is no. It has a stack depth restriction, but its > > absolutely nothing like Ja

[Haskell-cafe] anybody can tell me the pronuncation of "haskell"?

2008-01-28 Thread slofslb
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Re: [Haskell-cafe] Re: Re: hxt memory useage

2008-01-28 Thread Neil Mitchell
Hi > Not so sure about this. For streaming processing, it would be nicer to have > something like StAX with a stack of already entered elements kept about as > book-keeping |(the tags + attribute sets to root). Let's face it, if you sign > up to a document model, you are signing up to a document a

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Re: Re: hxt memory useage

2008-01-28 Thread Matthew Pocock
On Monday 28 January 2008, Rene de Visser wrote: > It would be nice if HXT was incremental even when you are processing the > whole tree. > > If I remember correctly, the data type of the tree in HXT is something like > > data Tree = Tree NodeData [Tree] > > which means that already processed parts

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Jamie Love
Just to clarify, I know it was my mistake, and so I'm not blaming Haskell or Ghc. The first few times you realise the compiler isn't a magic wand that stops you being silly are the hardest. Jamie Love wrote: Oh, I see I wasn't thinking through the code (and I'm still in the honeymoon phase

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Jamie Love
Oh, I see I wasn't thinking through the code (and I'm still in the honeymoon phase with Haskell, thinking it can do no wrong). Don Stewart wrote: jamie.love: Ah, of course. Thanks. I removed the hPut and it runs smoothly. I had forgotten that haskell chooses the types dynamical

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH
On Jan 28, 2008, at 17:33 , Jamie Love wrote: Shouldn't haskell pick up that there is no 'mod' for Word8? I mean, shouldn't I get a nicer error message? Hm? mod works fine for Word8, unless you specify a multiple of the type's bound. I think it's still hard for compilers to catch that

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Don Stewart
jamie.love: >Ah, of course. > >Thanks. I removed the hPut and it runs smoothly. I had forgotten that >haskell chooses the types dynamically. > >Shouldn't haskell pick up that there is no 'mod' for Word8? I mean, >shouldn't I get a nicer error message? Well, it inferred Word

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Jamie Love
Ah, of course. Thanks. I removed the hPut and it runs smoothly. I had forgotten that haskell chooses the types dynamically. Shouldn't haskell pick up that there is no 'mod' for Word8? I mean, shouldn't I get a nicer error message? Don Stewart wrote: jamie.love: Hi there, Not sure wh

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Don Stewart
jamie.love: > Hi there, > > Not sure where to raise bugs in hackage libraries, so I'm posting here. > If there is a better place, please let me know. > > The following code crashes with a divide by zero error when using the > package 'binary-0.4.' > Oh, hehe. \x -> x `mod` 256 doesn't work i

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Don Stewart
jamie.love: > Hi there, > > Not sure where to raise bugs in hackage libraries, so I'm posting here. > If there is a better place, please let me know. > > The following code crashes with a divide by zero error when using the > package 'binary-0.4.' Can you repeat this with binary 0.4.1 please?

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Jamie Love
I should point out that this is on GHC 6.8.2 compiled from source on a Mac powerpc. Jamie Love wrote: Hi there, Not sure where to raise bugs in hackage libraries, so I'm posting here. If there is a better place, please let me know. The following code crashes with a divide by zero error w

[Haskell-cafe] Crash in Data.ByteString.Lazy.hPut

2008-01-28 Thread Jamie Love
Hi there, Not sure where to raise bugs in hackage libraries, so I'm posting here. If there is a better place, please let me know. The following code crashes with a divide by zero error when using the package 'binary-0.4.' module Main where import IO import Data.Binary import Data.Binary.P

[Haskell-cafe] question about ghc run-time .a's

2008-01-28 Thread Galchin Vasili
Hello, I am trying to build Haskell packages on RedHat RHEL 5. How do I tell ghc where the ".a" (Linux archives) are? Is there an enviroment variable? Regards, Vasili ___ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mai

[Haskell-cafe] Re: Re: hxt memory useage

2008-01-28 Thread Rene de Visser
"Uwe Schmidt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > this statement isn't true in general. HXT itself can be incremental, if > there > is no need for traversing the whole XML tree. When processing a document > containing a DTD, indeed there is a need even when no vali

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread istarex
On Jan 28, 2008 1:07 PM, Neil Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > To answer the question if Haskell has a "stack depth restriction ... > like Java" the answer is no. It has a stack depth restriction, but its > absolutely nothing like Java in the way it uses the stack, so you > can't compare them

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread Neil Mitchell
Hi > ghc uses a pretty conventional stack AFAIK, and it is arbitrarily > limited, but you can change the limit with +RTS options. GHC uses a conventional stack (in that you put stuff at the top, and take it off from the top), but it is not a conventional stack in the way imperative programs work.

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread Adrian Hey
Neil Mitchell wrote: Hi Istarex, Does Haskell have a maximum stack depth restriction like Java & Python, or is it only limited by the maximum stack available on the system (i.e. what would be available to a C program)? You are probably thinking that recursive functions use up program stack, a

Re: [Haskell-cafe] How to organize code

2008-01-28 Thread Jonathan Cast
On 27 Jan 2008, at 11:18 PM, L.Guo wrote: Hi, How do you organize code ? Here is a sample. Acturally, I am thinking about using this plan. Any suggestions ? -- BasicalType.hs type Position = (Int,Int) data Box = Box { pos :: Position } data Chain = Chain { pos :: [Position] } -- Object.h

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread Neil Mitchell
Hi Istarex, > Does Haskell have a maximum stack depth restriction like Java & > Python, or is it only limited by the maximum stack available on the > system (i.e. what would be available to a C program)? You are probably thinking that recursive functions use up program stack, and hence the stack

[Haskell-cafe] Haskell maximum stack depth

2008-01-28 Thread istarex
Hi all, Does Haskell have a maximum stack depth restriction like Java & Python, or is it only limited by the maximum stack available on the system (i.e. what would be available to a C program)? Thanks, Istarex ___ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@

[Haskell-cafe] Re: Case-insensitive lexing with Alex

2008-01-28 Thread Geoffrey Mainland
Joel Reymont wrote: > > On Jan 28, 2008, at 2:44 PM, Geoffrey Mainland wrote: > >> map toLower onto your input before you pass it to your lexer? Or do you >> only want keywords to be case-insensitive? > > > Just keywords. You can have "Array" or "array" or "aRrAy". One old trick for reducing t

[Haskell-cafe] Re: Case-insensitive lexing with Alex

2008-01-28 Thread Joel Reymont
On Jan 28, 2008, at 2:44 PM, Geoffrey Mainland wrote: map toLower onto your input before you pass it to your lexer? Or do you only want keywords to be case-insensitive? Just keywords. You can have "Array" or "array" or "aRrAy". -- http://wagerlabs.com

[Haskell-cafe] Re: Properties of optimizer rule application?

2008-01-28 Thread Henning Thielemann
On Mon, 21 Jan 2008, Simon Peyton-Jones wrote: > | Recently I found that specialisation interacts in an unexpected way with > | explicit RULES (and with inlining). I used a function multiple times and > | this seemed to make GHC specialising this function (although I did not > | used a SPECIALISE

Re: The programming language market (was Re: [Haskell-cafe] Why functional programming matters

2008-01-28 Thread Jan-Willem Maessen
On Jan 27, 2008, at 11:05 PM, Dipankar Ray wrote: thanks for the correction - very informative! that'll teach me to just go to the opencourseware site at MIT only... On that note, I'll point out that many (roughly half?) the undergraduate CS majors at MIT do a 5 year combined bachelor's

[Haskell-cafe] Case-insensitive lexing with Alex

2008-01-28 Thread Joel Reymont
Any suggestions on how to implement case-insensitive lexing with Alex? Thanks, Joel -- http://wagerlabs.com ___ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe

Re: [Haskell-cafe] Re: hxt memory useage

2008-01-28 Thread Uwe Schmidt
Rene de Visser wrote: > "Matthew Pocock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > On Thursday 24 January 2008, Albert Y. C. Lai wrote: > >> Matthew Pocock wrote: > >> > I've been using hxt to process xml files. Now that my files are getting > >> > a > >> > bit bigg

code.haskell.org vs darcs.haskell.org (was [Haskell-cafe] Enterprise Haskell AMQP library)

2008-01-28 Thread Bayley, Alistair
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Don Stewart > > So you visit: > > community.haskell.org > > And submit your ssh public key, to allow you to log into > code.haskell.org > At the same time you can ask for a project account, which > will give you > space fo

Re: Re[2]: The programming language market (was Re: [Haskell-cafe] Why functional programming matters

2008-01-28 Thread Henning Thielemann
On Sun, 27 Jan 2008, Tim Chevalier wrote: > On 1/27/08, Dipankar Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > 3) most of the canonical US universities for CS (MIT, Berkeley, Stanford, > > CMU, etc) basically don't teach haskell or ML, or even talk much about it, > > relative to how much they talk about