Claus Reinke ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > > I've 'discovered' that latest KDevelop (3.0) has some sort of support for > > Haskell development. > > like what? seriously, what features would you _use_?
Didn't try yet, therefore I'm asking :-) But I saw that haskell is in the the table of supported languages. > > Although pretty new to Haskell, I'm looking for adequate IDE and would like > > to hear if someone can share his/her experiences in using KDevelop (or some > > other) IDE for Haskell development? > > (otherwise I'm light vim user, so pls. don't recommend me to learn emacs :-) > > so what's wrong with vim?-) > Nothing. Just the contrary :-) > syntax highlighting comes factory-installed, lots of the programmer's editor > features can be adapted for Haskell (more than most IDEs, and programmable, > just as in emacs, but who has time to read the manuals to find all the > features these two editorides provide? That's fine. I vim can satisfy my Haskell needs, it means jsut to dive a little bit deeper in. > would you believe that most Haskellers haven't > even set up their editor properly with Hugs, because they don't know that > would give them access to an age-old jump-to-definition feature?-), If you say so .. > http://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/projects/refactor-fp/ > (this is current, and should eventually include most of the former > Vim mode, not to mentions lots of other fascinating features:) This one is nice. Thank you. > > Cheers, > Claus > (who's been asking for ages that Haskell implementations provide > standard APIs, for IDEs such as vim and emacs and other tools to hook > into; and who is therefore happy to notice some recent and promising > developments) Have you (maybe) tried KDevelop with kvim? Sincerely, Gour -- Gour [EMAIL PROTECTED] Registered Linux User #278493 _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell
