Pretty much yeah.. Im going through the book and things like :
Define a function rangeProduct which when given natural numbers m and n,
returns the product m*(m+1)*....*(n-1)*n
I got the solution from my lecture notes but I still dont understand it..
rangeProduct :: Int -> Int -> Int
rangeProduct m n
| m > n = 0
| m == n = m
| otherwise = m * rangeProduct (m+1) n
Totally lost! Haha..
But thanks for the book suggestion, My exam is tommorow so I'm hoping theres
an online version of this book that I can read through!
And maybe by some divine miracle I'll understand it :-)
Martin Coxall-2 wrote:
>
>>
>> But after that im lost :(
>>
>> Is there any general advice? Just keep reading the book till it drills
>> into
>> my big head?
>
> Is it that you're having difficulty knowing how you'd solve certain
> classes of problems using Haskell? You're stuck in an imperative rut?
>
> The O'Reilly book "Real World Haskell" is very good for this, because as
> the name implies, it uses Haskell to solve actual engineering problems,
> rather than approach it from the theoretical angle.
>
> Martin
> _______________________________________________
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>
>
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