| > Haskell is pretty good about letting you install a different
Prelude, so you could try it yourself.
| 
| Hmm.  That's interesting!  How does this work?

It's very simple. Write your own Prelude as a Haskell module MyPrelude.

Then to use it, say
        module Foo where
          import Prelude ()
          import MyPrelude

(GHC lets you omit the 'import Prelude ()' by saying
-fno-implicit-prelude.)

No, there is no auto-magic; you are simply getting a different library,
that is all. And you have to write that library.

No problem with some modules using MyPrelude and some using Prelude.
(Any more than there's a problem when some modules import module A and
some import module B.)

Actually Haskell doesn't let you redefine *everything*, but GHC does:
read section 7.3.5 of the GHC manual
http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/latest/html/users_guide/syntax-extns.htm
l#REBINDABLE-SYNTAX


Simon


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