| The second header line shows categories, whereas the links in the grey
| boxes are to articles. The idioms category collects together
articles
| that are about idioms.
|
| We could have an idioms or programming techniques article as well,
| of course. It only needs to be written.
Interesting.
In article
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ft.com,
Simon Peyton-Jones [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
But can
we arrange the home page of Haskell.org so that a new and ignorant
visitor can simply look on the visible page (without prior knowledge)
and know where to go?
Yes, yes, go ahead and change the page
| To: Malcolm Wallace
| Cc: haskell-prime@haskell.org
| Subject: Re: Infix expressions
|
| Malcolm.Wallace:
| [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Donald Bruce Stewart) writes:
|
| Yes, this is _exactly_ the kind of thing to add to the Idioms
| page of the wiki, here:
| http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki
Simon Peyton-Jones wrote:
Incidentally, I looked on the Haskell home page for links to programming
idioms and advice, but came up empty. The obvious place to look was
under Using Haskell, but I didn't find anything. Was I being stupid?
Haskell.org is the obvious place to look for advice about
| Incidentally, I looked on the Haskell home page for links to
programming
| idioms and advice, but came up empty. The obvious place to look was
| under Using Haskell, but I didn't find anything. Was I being
stupid?
| Haskell.org is the obvious place to look for advice about
programming in
Simon Peyton-Jones wrote:
Oh yes so there is! But what is the rationale for what goes in those
two header lines, and what goes in the grey box lists? Why would
idioms be in the first place but not the second, and FAQ in the second
but not the first? Perhaps we could have just the grey boxes?
I often wish that cool tricks like this could be collected on the
Haskell web site. Now that it's a wiki, anyone could do that.
Simon
| -Original Message-
| From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
| [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| Sent: 15 March 2006 04:34
| To: [EMAIL
simonpj:
I often wish that cool tricks like this could be collected on the
Haskell web site. Now that it's a wiki, anyone could do that.
Yes, this is _exactly_ the kind of thing to add to the Idioms
page of the wiki, here:
http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Category:Idioms
So if anyone
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Donald Bruce Stewart) writes:
Yes, this is _exactly_ the kind of thing to add to the Idioms
page of the wiki, here:
http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Category:Idioms
So if anyone knows of an interesting Haskell trick, and wants to write
about it, add a page!
It is