imports by a little over half. Kind of wish
it could be made the default.
On Wed, Aug 7, 2013 at 10:23 PM, aditya bhargava bluemangrou...@gmail.com
wrote:
Hi there,
It seems like every Haskell program I write imports the following modules:
Control.Monad
Control.Applicative
Data.Maybe
Hi there,
It seems like every Haskell program I write imports the following modules:
Control.Monad
Control.Applicative
Data.Maybe
Data.List
Is there a good reason why these modules aren't imported by default? When I
write a simple script usually a 1/4th of the script is just imports, and my
code
This sounds really cool! I'm going to have to read up on SOMs.
On Fri, Jun 7, 2013 at 9:30 AM, Amy de Buitléir a...@nualeargais.ie wrote:
Do you have some data that you'd like to understand better? I'm happy to
announce a new release of a package called som that may help:
As a side note, I have stopped having cabal issues since I started using
hsenv. It sandboxes packages for you. So if you have install problems you
just need to delete a local .hsenv directory instead of reinstalling
everything.
On Jun 12, 2013 11:15 PM, Richard A. O'Keefe o...@cs.otago.ac.nz
Hey all,
I work at scribd.com. A few weeks ago we had released an AI game. It
allowed you to use Javascript to program a bot. I've been wanting to add
Haskell as a supported language for some time, and it's finally done! I'm
pretty excited since I think we are the first big company to do something
Johannes,
This worked for me: http://justhub.org/download
Adit
On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 4:05 PM, Tim Docker t...@dockerz.net wrote:
Here's the steps I had to go go to get ghc7.0 working on RHEL 5.6:
Sounds exciting!
On Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 6:22 PM, Bartosz Milewski bart...@fpcomplete.comwrote:
You might have seen a few post by me mentioning FP Complete and asked
yourself the question: Who is this guy and what is FP Complete?
I haven't been active in the Haskell community, as I'm a
that.
Le 27 avril 2012 04:16, aditya bhargava bluemangrou...@gmail.com a
écrit :
*Homepage:* http://egonschiele.github.com/HandsomeSoup
*On Hackage:* http://hackage.haskell.org/package/HandsomeSoup
*Blurb:*
HandsomeSoup is the library I wish I had when I started parsing HTML in
Haskell
*Homepage:* http://egonschiele.github.com/HandsomeSoup
*On Hackage:* http://hackage.haskell.org/package/HandsomeSoup
*Blurb:*
HandsomeSoup is the library I wish I had when I started parsing HTML in
Haskell.
It is built on top of HXT and adds a few functions that make is easier to
work with HTML.
After asking this question:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9963050/standard-way-of-joining-two-data-texts-without-mappend
I found out that the new infix operator for `mappend` is (). I'm
wondering why ghc 7.4 didn't generalize (++) to work on monoids instead. To
me, (++) is much more clear.
Looks cool! One suggestion: make it a webservice I can use like:
typeful.net/~tbot/hackage/[package name]
example:
typeful.net/~tbot/hackage/aeson
So that I don't have to download an 83k file for every request.
Adit
On Mon, Mar 26, 2012 at 4:12 AM, Simon Hengel s...@typeful.net wrote:
Hi,
Here's another Miku / Sinatra-like framework that looks interesting:
https://github.com/xich/scotty
From the README:
My issue with miku is that it uses the Hack2 interface
instead of WAI (they are analogous, but the latter seems to have more traction),
and that it is written using a custom
I don't know much about HaXml, but HXT is based on it and comes with a
tutorial:
http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/HXT
I also show some basic functionality of HXT in this blog post:
http://adit.io/posts/2012-03-10-building_a_concurrent_web_scraper_with_haskell.html
I'm curious to hear how
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