Until this email I was under the impression that the project is dead.
For example, if I go to google and type 'MissingH' the first link is
fsf's directory page. When I try to get to MissingH website from there
the link appears to be down. I can't really figure out what MissingH
includes and where to get it from searching the web, not easily
anyway. I think fixing this will go a long way to a more widespread
adoption of the library.

Thanks,
- Slava Akhmechet

On 11/24/06, John Goerzen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Fri, Nov 24, 2006 at 12:37:10PM -0800, Jason Dagit wrote:
> On 11/24/06, John Goerzen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >What else should be done to make this a valuable resource for Haskell
> >programmers?  And a showcase for what is possible with Haskell?
>
> I was going to try MissingH on win32 but when I did it refused to
> compile due to a dependency on, I think, Posix.  It would be great if
> this could be fixed/relaxed.  At the time I was looking forward to
> trying the logging facilities.

That should be completely fixed for a long time now.  But I will admit
I haven't tried to build the latest version on GHC 6.6.

In fact, I wrote an entire module (MissingH.IO.StatCompat) so that
Windows users can also enjoy HVFS.

-- John

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