Thank you Hans, and Henning. I like that they refer to the problem as
"cabal hell".
On Tue, Jul 1, 2014 at 11:23 AM, Hans Höglund wrote:
> Nowadays you can do this with Cabal sandboxes. See more info here
>
> http://coldwa.st/e/blog/2013-08-20-Cabal-sandbox.html
>
> Regards,
> Hans
>
> -
>
> Ha
Am 01.07.2014 17:27, schrieb Henning Thielemann:
> As a user I have not tried cabal-dev and friends. I am just using
> 'cabal' and since there are so many versions of the packages and GHC
> around, many packages are installed multiple times (in different package
> and GHC versions) on my machine,
Am 01.07.2014 17:17, schrieb Al Matthews:
> Hello .. I find Haskell package-management to be a bit of a dark art.
Do you mean management as a maintainer or as a user?
For maintainers I wrote some scripts:
http://hackage.haskell.org/package/cabal-scripts
http://hackage.haskell.org/package
Nowadays you can do this with Cabal sandboxes. See more info here
http://coldwa.st/e/blog/2013-08-20-Cabal-sandbox.html
Regards,
Hans
-
Hans Hglund
Composer, conductor and developer
hans [at] hanshoglund.se
hanshoglund.com
https://twitter.com/hanshogl
https://soundcloud.com/hanshoglund
http://
Hello .. I find Haskell package-management to be a bit of a dark art.
In particular, what I find, is that it is easy to break things on which I
rely.
This is compounded no doubt by my use of several development platforms.
Still, I wonder if anyone has recommendations on using hsenv, or capri, or