I am writing a blog post concurrently with preparing my talk so I will post that afterwards.
I would have expected `dante` to work with the `./hadrian/ghci.sh` target. What goes wrong there? The haskell-ide-engine support lives on a branch, which you are welcome to try, but comes with no guarantees. It is more than a proof of concept but less than fully production ready. Matt On Tue, Jun 11, 2019 at 7:29 AM Sven Tennie <sven.ten...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hey Matthew, > > Could you do me a big favor and record/document this session? Unfortunately I > won't make it to the ZuriHac, but I'm highly interested in improving my GHC > workflow. > > Currently I'm working in a cycle of: > > 1. read code in haskell-code-explorer [1] > 2. modify it in Emacs (currently only syntax highlighting, no type checking) > 3. look at ghcid if the types match > 4. goto 1 or use hadrian to build > > I guess this may be improved by the haskell-ide-engine. > > Of course would it be amazing, if all talks could be recorded. > > BTW - If any of the other readers has a better setup, please share. I found > very little about IDE setup for GHC in the Wiki or Internet and the > "standard" dante or intero approaches don't seem to work, at least not out of > the box. > > Best regards, > > Sven > > [1] - https://haskell-code-explorer.mfix.io/package/ghc-8.6.1/ > > Am Sa., 25. Mai 2019 um 13:08 Uhr schrieb Matthew Pickering > <matthewtpicker...@gmail.com>: >> >> Andreas/Niklas, >> >> I can do a talk/demo of using tools such as `ghc-artefact-nix`, >> `haskell-ide-engine`, `ghcid`, GHC's debugger whilst working on GHC. >> Could you schedule in a 30 minute slot for that please if you think it >> would be of interest. >> >> Cheers, >> >> Matt >> >> On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 5:52 PM Andreas Herrmann <andreas...@gmx.ch> wrote: >> > >> > Dear GHC devs, >> > >> > This year's ZuriHac 2019 [1] will again feature a dedicated GHC track to >> > foster contributions to GHC and teach newcomers how to participate in >> > GHC's development. It was a great success last year, and we hope it will >> > be a great success this year as well. >> > >> > For that we need your help: We would like to invite you to organize a >> > session in the GHC track. This could be in form of a presentation, a >> > workshop, or a hack session with topics centered around GHC. >> > >> > For some inspiration, these are the subjects from last year's track: >> > - Continuous Integration / DevOps, by Manual Chakravarty >> > - PrimOps / PrimTypes, by Michal Terepeta >> > - Performance Regression Tests, by Niklas Hambüchen >> > - Newcomers Tutorial, by Andreas Herrmann >> > >> > Other possible subjects could be around: >> > - Improving documentation >> > - Extending GHC's test-suite >> > - General GHC development workflows >> > - The inner workings of some aspect of GHC >> > >> > Aside from preparing a session, we are also looking for volunteers to be >> > around as GHC mentors during hack sessions to help out newcomers. >> > >> > Please let us know if you'd be interested in leading a session, or being a >> > mentor, or helping out with this track in any other way. You can contact >> > either Niklas or myself, on this list or by private message. >> > >> > Best, >> > Niklas and Andreas >> > ZuriHac 2019 GHC track coordinators >> > >> > [1]: https://zfoh.ch/zurihac2019/ >> > _______________________________________________ >> > ghc-devs mailing list >> > ghc-devs@haskell.org >> > http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs >> _______________________________________________ >> ghc-devs mailing list >> ghc-devs@haskell.org >> http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs _______________________________________________ ghc-devs mailing list ghc-devs@haskell.org http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs