In the source file, the Haddock documentation is there, no idea why it
doesn't show up.
Am 15.02.2012 04:00 schrieb "Doug McIlroy" <d...@cs.dartmouth.edu>:

> Markus: "What about hoogle/hayoo and hackage?"
>
> Antoine: "Do you have any links to examples that we should imitate?"
>
> Hackage is notionally similar to the Java API documentation at
> http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/documentation/
> But Hackage "Documentation" pages typically only give syntax, while Java
> pages invariably summarize semantics.  This makes a world of difference.
> The quality of the summaries bespeaks a lot of editorial attention
> above and beyond culling annotations from source code.
>
> Considerable care has been taken in describing the GHC library at
> http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/
> but even there one can find absolute mystery entries like
>
> http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/latest/html/libraries/haskell98-2.0.0.1/Locale.html
>
> Doug
>
> > It is hard to find one's way in this ecosystm. It needn't be,
> > as Java illustrates. To my mind Java's great contribution to the
> > world is its library index--light years ahead of typical
> > "documentation" one finds at haskell.org, which lacks the guiding
> > hand of a flesh-and-blood librarian. In this matter, it
> > seems, industrial curation can achieve clarity more easily than
> > open source.
>
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