No, Haskell support in the free version too. However, you'll have to
add the tools to compile .hs files in the "Tools" menu. You can pipe
the output to directly highlight errors/warnings in the document
(which is what's done in the screenshot below), because the editor
understands what GHC errors/warnings look like.
Regards,
John
http://www.n-brain.net | 877-376-2724 x 101
On Jan 23, 2009, at 10:45 AM, Peter Verswyvelen wrote:
looks like a neath editor. too bad on windows you don't get anti
aliased fonts (I guess it uses an old J2SE or something?)
at first sight I was not able to find Haskell support in the freely
downloadable version. is this available in the commercial version?
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 6:50 PM, John A. De Goes <[email protected]>
wrote:
Not that you're looking to switch editors, but if you want something
a little more hassle-free:
http://www.n-brain.net/unashots/Haskell/ErrorHighlighting.png
Regards,
John
On Jan 22, 2009, at 10:17 AM, Peter Verswyvelen wrote:
I have a silly problem.
I'm using Emacs with the Haskell mode extension on Windows
I have a source file in say
c:/foo/src/main.hs
main.hs is importing some other modules in that same src directory
When I invoke GHCi from within Emacs, the first thing it does is
:cd c:/foo
and then
:load "src/main.hs"
But of course GHCi won't find the imported modules now, since the
current directory is wrong.
If I type in GHCi
:cd src
:load "main.hs"
then it compiles fine.
Does anyone have an idea why Emacs or the Haskell mode is switching
to the parent directory of src instead of src itself, and how to fix
this?
Thanks a lot,
Peter
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