I'm sure there's some theory about fags being unable to use tools and stuff.
It certainly cannot be anything to do with cultural pressure. Perhaps it
is easy to mistake a male-dominated field for one that males are
intrinsically good at, but really, have a look at the Y chromosome, it does
I suppose it's easy to miss the underlying sexism when you aren't affected
by it.
2010/3/28 Günther Schmidt gue.schm...@web.de
Hi guys,
judging by the responses so far it seems that the gay haskellers have more
balls than the female haskellers to come out of the closet.
Uhm.
Günther
On Tue, Jan 12, 2010 at 11:26 PM, Daniel Fischer
daniel.is.fisc...@web.dewrote:
Okay, 'as' is easy. But can you find a situation where 'qualified' or
'hiding' would be natural choices for an identifier? I'd love to see those
in some code :)
module LordsOfMidnight.Character(Character) where
I'm Switzerland on open source licenses -- I use GPL3 on everything I write,
because I like the default position, but I'm always happy to relicense on
request (except maybe to companies like Fluffy Bunny Killer, Inc). My
sister tells me I'm a control freak, and maybe I am :-)
So BSD is just
know.
On Tue, Feb 17, 2009 at 12:51 AM, Fraser Wilson blancoli...@gmail.comwrote:
Hi Peter,
Thanks!
I haven't tried to compile with 0.10.0 but I can guess that the errors
arise from the use of ListStore. I'm not sure what the best approach is
here. Is 0.9.13 over now? If so, then I'll
What was that stripped-down low-level version of C I saw coming out of ...
was it Microsoft Research? C-- or something. Unfortunately, the name
appears to be immune to Googling.
2009/2/16 Alberto G. Corona agocor...@gmail.com
http://www.ats-lang.org/
2009/2/16 Jon Fairbairn
Super! Also, best definition of bottom I've yet seen -- ignoring _|_,
which is a party pooper. Like good code, it's short, to the point, and
obviously correct.
Thanks for this. It's great to have it all in one place, and so
entertainingly presented.
cheers,
Fraser.
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at
Montag, 16. Februar 2009 18:05 schrieb Fraser Wilson:
I'd love to hack on Grapefruit.
That’s great!
I'll do some study (and take a break from my own world-changing
functional
GUI :-)
I tried to check out your repository at
http://thewhitelion.org/darcs/barrie/
but darcs get failed
Since I'm congenitally lazy, and writing a GUI by hand in the IO monad is
... not what I expect from a beautiful program, and because what I often
need is a GUI that manipulates a state, and because I don't understand
arrows, and having been intrigued by a recent cafe thread, I threw together
a
You must have missed the bit about congenitally lazy :-)
Username requested ...
cheers,
Fraser.
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 8:10 PM, Lennart Augustsson
lenn...@augustsson.netwrote:
Put it on hackage!
2009/2/16 Fraser Wilson blancoli...@gmail.com:
Since I'm congenitally lazy, and writing
, Show, Monoid)
Also, put it on hackage! :) It looks pretty cool.
-- ryan
2009/2/16 Fraser Wilson blancoli...@gmail.com:
Since I'm congenitally lazy, and writing a GUI by hand in the IO monad is
... not what I expect from a beautiful program, and because what I often
need is a GUI
was.
And now I see them all over the place, and I'm a better person for it.
Surely this is too much to be considered actual programming!
cheers,
Fraser.
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 10:40 PM, Duncan Coutts duncan.cou...@worc.ox.ac.uk
wrote:
On Mon, 2009-02-16 at 20:30 +0100, Fraser Wilson wrote:
You must
.
Cheers,
Peter
2009/2/16 Fraser Wilson blancoli...@gmail.com
Now that I re-read my email, it looks like I'm saying Username
requested in the sense of OK, Cafe people, treat this as a user
name request and step to it. What I meant was that I have
requested a username (via the email
Is that really cold or really hot?
On Sun, Feb 15, 2009 at 11:27 PM, Henk-Jan van Tuyl hjgt...@chello.nlwrote:
The temperature is now NaN°:
http://traviswalters.net/?p=58
--
Met vriendelijke groet,
Henk-Jan van Tuyl
--
http://functor.bamikanarie.com
http://Van.Tuyl.eu/
--
You know, I read the Fudgets thesis, and threw together an experiment which
used Glade for layout and Haskell for semantics [1]. As somebody else
noted, this isn't really a clean division, because of things like editable
flags in the layout. The darcs repository has a couple of demo
1) They come from the show instance for String. Try putStrLn (t2
fleet) instead.
pedant
The show instance for Char.
/pedant
(I know you know this, I just have this weird fascination with the showList
wart, although for the life of me I can't think of a better way of doing it)
cheers,
Hi all,
Has anybody seen this? I thought it might be an SELinux thing, but then I
wouldn't expect GHC or darcs to run. Audley is a fairly simple program in
operating system feature terms, but I get the same error with anything I
build myself.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] audley]$
.
The unconfined_u looks suspicious.
cheers,
Fraser.
On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 3:48 PM, David Leimbach [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Did you try turning off SELinux to check?
2008/12/2 Fraser Wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi all,
Has anybody seen this? I thought it might be an SELinux thing
?
2008/12/2 Fraser Wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi all,
Has anybody seen this? I thought it might be an SELinux thing, but
then I wouldn't expect GHC or darcs to run. Audley is a fairly
simple program in operating system feature terms, but I get the same
error with anything I build myself
I had a proof of concept lying around a couple of years ago in which a
big complicated Ada program called a big complicated Haskell program
and vice versa. The tricky bit from memory was making it link, and
satisfying their rumtime initialisation requirements. No explicit C
was required
I think you mean in a do. There is a proposal to fix this in Haskell'
cheers,
Fraser
On Sep 25, 2008, at 6:59, Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On 2008 Sep 25, at 0:47, leledumbo wrote:
consider this partial program:
if n5 then
putStrLn big
else
putStrLn small
this works
Hello, Haskellers,
I feel like I'm missing something obvious, but here's some example code:
module Instance where
data Value = Value Integer
class ValueClass a where
fromValue :: Value - a
instance ValueClass Bool where
fromValue (Value n) = n /= 0
instance ValueClass String
On Mon, Apr 28, 2008 at 10:50 PM, Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The format is instance [context =] classname instance.
Your classname is ValueClass.
Your instance is a. a is not of the form (T a1 ... an).
But neither is
instance (Show a) = Show [a] ...
*sound of
On Mon, Apr 28, 2008 at 11:33 PM, Luke Palmer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
To answer your other question, no, there is no list show hack.
Perhaps hack was a strong word. I'm not referring to type synonyms, but to
the fact that Prelude's show class happens to have a special show function
for
On Mon, Apr 28, 2008 at 11:46 PM, Luke Palmer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
2008/4/28 Fraser Wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
what I am trying to say is if a is an instance of Num, then
can be an instance of ValueClass too, and here's how.
Oh, didn't answer this one. This is almost canned response
On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 4:46 PM, Bertram Felgenhauer
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Assuming you're writing a cabal package, you could separate the interface
from the actual implementation:
[..]
HTH,
Magic. Thanks a lot!
cheers,
Fraser.
___
On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 2:09 AM, Graham Fawcett [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I notice in the source for GHC.Handle that certain functions (e.g.
fdToHandle_stat) are in the export list, but are not actually exported
(at least, it seems you cannot import them). What mechanism causes
these functions
I find it interesting that change is equated with maintenance. I would
say that maintenance is a very small subset of change. It's true that you
can change a program in a dynamically typed language more easily, in the
same way that changes are easier to make if you don't use source control and
(untested)
mapM_ runPut data
?
On Jan 24, 2008 12:14 PM, Jamie Love [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi there
I have a list of ints, with values between 0 and 255 and I need to print
them out in little endian form to a file.
I've been using Data.Binary for single values, e.g.
runPut $ do
In head'', what is being compared to Nil?
The guards of a function are a series of Boolean expressions; but in your
example they are of type ConsCell a. The difference is that in a pattern,
the structure of the argument is matched; in a guard, an arbitrary
expression is evaluated.
I have always
I don't use Haskell on Windows, but if you go to
http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/latest/html/libraries/index.html
you'll find a package called System.Win32.File, which has these functions:
*getFileAttributes* ::
On 11/17/05, Greg Woodhouse [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Isn't there a potential for confusion with function composition (f . g)?
Perhaps, but I always have spaces on either side when it's function composition. Isn't there already an ambiguity?
-- I bet there's a quicker way to do this ...
module M
On 11/6/05, Klaus Ostermann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
instance Node Person where isConnectedTo g n (p1,p2) = (p1 == n) || (p2 == n)
At this point, isConnectedTo knows nothing about the third argument
except that it is an edge, and there's no reason to think that an Edge
is a tuple. All you can say
Hi there,
I would like to use evaluate arbitrary expressions in the context of a
mixed-language (Ada, Haskell and about twelve lines of C glue)
applications. Is it possible to use dynload from hs-plugins to
load a module that references symbols in the loading program?
For example, the
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