Hi Chris, Thanks for that video, I'm looking forward to any more that you might do.
Seeing your workflow is a very important aspect to your video, especially for newcomers trying to learn Haskell on their own. A brief overview of your tooling would be nice. Unfortunately, I shaved a yak very well, possibly more than once, while improving my PS1 prompt. Starting with duplicating your $? display but not stopping thereā¦ oh no, couldn't stop at just that :-) Cheers, Bob On 2013-01-07, at 6:50 PM, Chris Forno <je...@jekor.com> wrote: > I've just uploaded a video walking through > some of the source code for Pandoc. I plan to > create more videos like it (on Pandoc and other > open source/free software projects), and I'd > appreciate your feedback. > > https://www.youtube.com/watch? > v=FEFETKhhq8w&feature=youtube_gdata_play > er > > I think Haskell is particularly well-suited for this > type of study: > > - The code tends to be concise, and parts can > usually be analyzed in isolation thanks to > explicit state. > - Even after 10 years of exposure to Haskell I > feel like I still have much to learn about > idiomatic style from the writings of others. > - I've run across the same misconceptions > about Haskell in the professional world (and > had some myself in the beginning), and would > like more people to see what Haskell really is > like outside of papers and blog posts. > > Please let me know if there are other projects > you'd like to see me cover. Thanks. > > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell mailing list > Haskell@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list Haskell@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell