On Wed, 7 Feb 2007, Cale Gibbard wrote:
On 28/01/07, Alexy Khrabrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
I got referred to Haskell by an acquaintance when I happened to
mention that I was interested in algebraic approaches to music theory.
He referred me to Haskore.
On 28/01/07, Alexy Khrabrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
I got referred to Haskell by an acquaintance when I happened to
mention that I was interested in algebraic approaches to music theory.
He referred me to Haskore.
- Cale
On 1/28/07, Alexy Khrabrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
I came at it from two angles:
General interest in actor languages led me to Io
(http://www.iolanguage.com), which used Darcs for its RCS at the time,
which led me to look at the source code for it, which go
On Sun, 28 Jan 2007, Alexy Khrabrov wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell? I've taught ML at UPenn, and many
of my colleagues in Amazon are in SeaFunc -- switching from C funk to
func funk. I've got Hudak's book a while ago, but didn't have
time/excuse to delve into it until recently. Then t
A new implementation technique for applicative languages, David A.
Turner, Software — Practice and Experience, 9:31–49, 1979.
I'm not sure if it's available online.
-- Lennart
On Feb 4, 2007, at 01:14 , Michael Vanier wrote:
Lennart,
Now you've made me curious. Which paper is this?
Lennart,
Now you've made me curious. Which paper is this? Is it available for download
anywhere?
Mike
Lennart Augustsson wrote:
On Jan 29, 2007, at 03:01 , Alexy Khrabrov wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
Well, I didn't really stumble on it. I was at the 1987 meeting
when we dec
> "Paul" == Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Paul> because I was sure that Eiffel was the future.
You were right!
Paul> It had become painfully
Paul> obvious that Eiffel wasn't going anywhere.
Hm. Why do I make a living at it then? And why is there now an ECMA
standard f
In about 93 or 94 a colleague had talked to me about this wierd
language called Haskell. At the time I hadn't listened because I was
sure that Eiffel was the future. Besides, he had showed me a GUI demo: a
calculator that took about half a second to register a button click. So
I concluded that
I'll go for the shortest story...
I stumbled upon Simon's "Composing Financial Contracts" paper, Simon
was gracious enough to spend a fair bit of time on the phone with me.
The rest is history :-).
Joel
--
http://wagerlabs.com/
___
Ha
On Jan 29, 2007, at 03:01 , Alexy Khrabrov wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
Well, I didn't really stumble on it. I was at the 1987 meeting
when we decided to define Haskell.
But I stumbled on functional programming in the first place.
I had to learn it because it was part of a course
On 1/28/07, Alexy Khrabrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
I was thinking that my story wasn't particularly interesting, but then
again, I may be the only person on this list who can actually give a
properly-cited publication as an answer to the question "how did yo
On 1/28/07, Alexy Khrabrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
My story isn't as interesting as some of these. My first quarter in
school, I took a course taught in Scheme. I expressed some
dissatisfaction with the lack of types (and, in particular, the
collection of
What's folks most interesting ways to arrive at FP?
Mine isn't most interesting.
I did some interesting (I think so) research in visualisation and coded
it in C. Then I tried to extend it - speed it up, add more features,
etc, - and found C unsatisfactory. It is error prone and C programs
Bob Davison wrote:
I
thought calculus was about differentiation and integration and was very
surprised to discover that there were such things as 'predicate
calculus', 'propositional calculus', and various flavours of 'lambda
calculus'.
The stuff involving rates of change, integration, and
From: "Alexy Khrabrov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: haskell-cafe@haskell.org
Subject: [Haskell-cafe] How did you stumble on Haskell?
Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2007 19:01:57 -0800
How do people stumble on Haskell?
-- snip
What's folks most interesting ways to arrive at FP?
Cheers,
Alexy
I have been pro
I find it odd when people talk about portability in languages. Form me that
has always been a given (I started my first language, c++ in 2002).
I got into Haskell and FP in general when I took advanced languages at my
uni and I still write haskell java and c++ regularly.
On 1/29/07, David Kirkma
On 1/28/07, Alexy Khrabrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell? I've taught ML at UPenn, and many
For some diversity ...
For years I'd been using (and largely happy with)
pure fortran with a little tcl thrown in for scripting.
I'd played around with a few other languag
Hi,
I was working in embedded development, writing lots of C code. My
primary tool for debugging things was turning an LED on or off. So, I
became quite interested in figuring out how to write code with less
bugs.
After some searching, I found lclint, (now knows as splint:
http://lclint.cs.virgin
I wrote:
I soon realized that everything I liked about Python
had been borrowed from Haskell in diluted form.
Doaitse Swierstra wrote:
I do not think you are entirely right here; a lot of things were
borrowed from a language called ABC,
See: http://homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/abc/
True. I wasn'
On Jan 29, 2007, at 9:53 AM, Yitzchak Gale wrote:
After many years of OO Perl, I looked at Python.
Within fifteen minutes I had switched, and I never
looked back at Perl.
A few years later, I had a need to hack into the
Python interpreter. While reading up on that,
I came across references to
After many years of OO Perl, I looked at Python.
Within fifteen minutes I had switched, and I never
looked back at Perl.
A few years later, I had a need to hack into the
Python interpreter. While reading up on that,
I came across references to Haskell. I soon
realized that everything I liked abou
On Sun, 2007-28-01 at 19:01 -0800, Alexy Khrabrov wrote:
> How do people stumble on Haskell?
I was working at a company I won't name on a product line that was
collapsing under the weight of C++, mismanagement and the typical
arch-conservatism of practicing programmers (for whom UNIX is still
fr
On 1/28/07, Alexy Khrabrov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do people stumble on Haskell?
Read Ullman's book on ML. Look at Haskell at that point, but was
insufficiently mathematically sophisticated to "get it" (hey, I was
sixteen). Wrote numerical analysis code in Forth for a year or so.
Hacke
On Sun, Jan 28, 2007 at 07:01:57PM -0800, Alexy Khrabrov wrote:
> How do people stumble on Haskell? I've taught ML at UPenn, and many
specific story elided
> What's folks most interesting ways to arrive at FP?
You want weird? I was referred here by the Unlambda Manual. Oh if I
ignore the synta
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