hython
patat
hython | patat | |
---|---|---|
2 | 9 | |
572 | 2,330 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 8.0 | |
almost 7 years ago | 2 months ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v2.0 only |
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.
hython
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Leaving Haskell Behind
This really resonates with me.
I’ve been using it in a decidedly industrial application for about 1.5 years now. I had some fairly significant experience with it prior (https://github.com/mattgreen/hython).
For the first time in a long time (20 years experience) I’ve needed to learn a significant amount of things. It’s a combo of the domain and the language. It’s rather exhilarating, and also exhausting. Could also be a lot to bite off on with a busy home life too.
Regardless, the language is brilliant. My manager exhorts me to generally write in a top-down manner a lot because Haskell’s flexibility really conveys dev intent well, so think hard about how it should read, and start from there. This is a huge mindset shift from most langs, where you can feel your brain shut off to save cycles as you type “function” over and over. It really feels like it is meant to be write-friendly. Point-free functions are wonderfully terse to write. I joke that TH is my favorite language: a type-checked macro language that lets me write almost anything I want.
And there’s the rub: even with controlled effects via monads, the syntax is still hard for me to scan and read. I don’t know if this comes eventually or what, but this feels like a function of how dense a line could be. I miss early return dearly, and understand why it isn’t a thing (except if you have a MonadZero at hand) but I know it’s a syntactic transformation that won’t make it in. I really miss the amazing Rust LSP. Haskell’s recently lost the ability to flesh out pattern matches due to Haskell internals shifting with 9.x. I still hate and screw up stacking monads. Compile times can be brutal, esp if you hit the lens library.
I really think the community is one of the strongest group of programmers I’ve already seen. I don’t want to belabor this and dwell on the big brain memes, it’s more that they think hard on this stuff and actually push forward, vs just telling each other that web frameworks are rocket science and it’s impossible to do better than what it exists.
Ultimately, Haskell fits like a glove for our domain of program analysis. Beyond that, I’d still be a bit wary. I’m still thirsty for a PL that is essentially OCaml but with a better syntax. But that’s just me.
- Dhall: A Gateway Drug to Haskell
patat
- patat: Terminal-based presentations using Pandoc
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Pysentation – The Python Presentation
I've been using https://github.com/jaspervdj/patat previously, but this looks like a worthy alternative. Nice work, I'll have try this out :)
- Dhall: A Gateway Drug to Haskell
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Slides: Terminal based Markdown presentation tool
Patat (https://github.com/jaspervdj/patat) supports any Pandoc input including Markdown, plus it allows embedding snippets with execution result and even images in supported terminals.
- Terminal-based presentations using Pandoc
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a simple plaintext presentation tool
I’m a big fan of patat for last-minute presentations, it converts markdown to slideshows with support for syntax highlighting, images, bullet points, etc.
What are some alternatives?
pandoc - Universal markup converter
mustache-haskell - mustache implementation in Haskell
hxt-charproperties - Haskell XML Toolbox
slides - Terminal based presentation tool
pcre2 - Complete Haskell binding to PCRE2
text-offset - Emits code crossreference data for Haskell sources.
emanote - Emanate a structured view of your plain-text notes
arx - Bundles code and a job to run for local or remote execution.
formatting - Format strings type-safely with combinators
katip - A structured logging framework for Haskell
hprotoc - Haskell protocol-buffers package
xmlgen - XML generator library for Haskell