ghcid
quickbench
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ghcid | quickbench | |
---|---|---|
12 | 1 | |
1,120 | 21 | |
- | - | |
4.0 | 4.0 | |
2 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | LicenseRef-GPL |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ghcid
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Anyone know the best way to use haskell for arch linux?
You can use ghcid. It compiles the code, and shows if there are any errors as you save your file. Have two terminals. One for editing your file...other one with ghcid ($ ghcid path/to/filename.hs). Right click on the ghcid terminal and click `always on top`. That way, It will be always visible as you are typing and saving code.
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Static-ls - a low memory Haskell language server based on hiedb and hiefiles
With a combination of ghcid, an hiedb filewatcher and the -fdefer-type-errors flag you can get pretty solid IDE behavior. Currently only ghc 9.4.4 is supported but happy to personally help people set this up if interested!
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What's the best Editor+Tests experience we can get with Haskell?
With an editor integration, you could rig it up to where you could right-click on a Spec, choose "Run spec" from a context menu, and have your editor add that comment to and save dev.hs. Another editor integration could read and parse the contents of ghcid.txt. We have this already for the compiler output, but it doesn't yet parse the test output. But sans an editor integration, you will still see the test output in the console where Ghcid is running.
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What's the best way to use a REPL for TDD?
Sounds like you want ghcid. You can use it run tests on a successful build, and it will watch files in your project and quick-rebuild when there are changes. There shouldn't be any need to modify your Cabal files or test dependencies.
- Open source projects for beginners
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TDD for AoC?
In addition, for Haskell, I usually have ghcid running, which likewise re-runs on every file change, but gives faster feedback about any type errors than the full compiler, and also is configured to evaluate
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Automatically reloading ghci when a file changes
Have you looked into ghcid? https://github.com/ndmitchell/ghcid
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Most braindead easy end to end haskell workflow?
VS Code + Haskell extension is usually best, but ghcid is an alternative which is much simpler, easier to set up, less pretty and powerful but still pretty easy and effective to use. Here's a workflow:
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How to cabal?
In general, though, I recommend just looking at the cabal files for various libraries and executables. Something like ghcid is good, since it contains a library, an executable, and a test suite.
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Fast way to run Haskell script from nvim?
you should also checkout the ghci vim plugin https://github.com/ndmitchell/ghcid/tree/master/plugins/nvim
quickbench
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Dhall: A Gateway Drug to Haskell
A few more:
https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger - Robust, fast, intuitive plain text accounting tool with CLI, TUI and web interfaces
https://github.com/simonmichael/shelltestrunner - Easy, repeatable testing of CLI programs/commands
https://github.com/simonmichael/quickbench - Easily time one or more commands with one or more executables and show tabular results
https://github.com/haskell-game/fungen - A lightweight, cross-platform, OpenGL-based 2D game engine in Haskell
https://haskell-game.dev - a small selection of many games written in Haskell
What are some alternatives?
ghci-ng
gtk2hs-buildtools - GUI library for Haskell based on GTK+
stack - The Haskell Tool Stack
lambdabot - A friendly IRC bot and apprentice coder, written in Haskell.
ghcide - A library for building Haskell IDE tooling
hindent - Haskell pretty printer
hlint - Haskell source code suggestions
shelly - Haskell shell scripting
castle - A tool to manage shared cabal-install sandboxes.
hyperion - A lab for future Criterion features.
hadolint - Dockerfile linter, validate inline bash, written in Haskell
elm-make