+1, better cabal support for UHC's JS backend would be a big win.
Daniel
2012/3/11 Jurriën Stutterheim j.stutterh...@me.com:
While I might be a bit biased (I spent a good deal of time working on
improving the UHC JS backend), I think there are a lot of opportunities to
get Haskell as a
Hi all,
There's seems to be a growing trend amongst the Haskell community for
writing replacements of enumerator. It's shortcomings are well
documented, but the solution is, IMO, undecided. This is my attempt:
https://gist.github.com/1915841
I have largely copied pipes' concept. The major
Hi,
I'm the author of Siege, see https://github.com/DanielWaterworth/siege
. It's not production ready, but it's in active development.
Daniel
On 17 February 2012 06:56, Vasili I. Galchin vigalc...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I have been looking through Hackage database for a Haskell
I've been trying to write networking code in Haskell too. I've also
come to the conclusion that channels are the way to go. However,
what's missing in the standard `Chan` type, which is essential for my
use-case, is the ability to do the equivalent of the unix select call.
My other slight qualm is
Disregard that last comment on `TChan`s; retry blocks. you learn a new
thing every day [=
Daniel
On 14 January 2012 11:27, Daniel Waterworth da.waterwo...@gmail.com wrote:
I've been trying to write networking code in Haskell too. I've also
come to the conclusion that channels are the way to go
Hi Peter,
streamproc is a very interesting package, I'll surely use it somewhere
in the future. However, I'm not convinced that this solves my
immediate problem, but perhaps this is due to my inexperience with
arrows. My problem is:
I have a number of network connections and I have a system that
On 14 January 2012 19:24, Rob Stewart robstewar...@googlemail.com wrote:
On 14 January 2012 18:05, Steffen Schuldenzucker
sschuldenzuc...@uni-bonn.de wrote:
I think consistent state here means that you can be sure no other thread
has modified a, say, TVar, within the current 'atomically'
Hi all,
This is what I've been working on recently in my spare time,
https://github.com/DanielWaterworth/siege . It's a DBMS written in
Haskell, it's in a partially working state, you can start it up and
interact with it using the redis protocol, it implements a subset of
redis's commands.
It
I must admit, I haven't looked into arrows in a great deal of detail,
perhaps I should.
Daniel
2011/12/22 Ertugrul Söylemez e...@ertes.de:
Daniel Waterworth da.waterwo...@gmail.com wrote:
I made this simple state machine combinator library today. I think it
works as a simple example
I made this simple state machine combinator library today. I think it
works as a simple example of a good use for GADTs.
https://gist.github.com/1507107
Daniel
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at 18:34 +, Daniel Waterworth wrote:
I made this simple state machine combinator library today. I think it
works as a simple example of a good use for GADTs.
https://gist.github.com/1507107
Any way to do something along the lines of
type StateChange a = SC a a
handleChange :: Monad m
Hi,
This morning I have written an STM implementation as a learning
exercise. I thought I'd share it here to get some critique and because
it might be useful to others (consider it as being in the public
domain). I haven't tested it thoroughly, so there may be edge cases
that haven't been thought
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