post-rfc
text
Our great sponsors
post-rfc | text | |
---|---|---|
27 | 13 | |
2,186 | 395 | |
- | 0.5% | |
2.3 | 8.4 | |
9 months ago | 6 days ago | |
C++ | ||
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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.
post-rfc
-
Haskell in Production: Standard Chartered
That's what it's best for, but personally I use it for everything. If I ever get into low-level code I'll probably use Rust though.
You can confirm that parsers/tokenizers is ranked "best in class" here though:
https://github.com/Gabriella439/post-rfc/blob/main/sotu.md
-
Recommendations for well informed, up-to-date guide to Haskell backend engineering
Note that this is ported from here: https://github.com/Gabriella439/post-rfc/blob/main/sotu.md which comes with more exposition.
-
I want to learn Haskell, but...
State of the Haskell Ecosystem
-
Why are haskell applications so obscure?
According to State of the Haskell ecosystem, Haskell is THE language of choice for implementing compilers, and THE language of choice for writing parsers. Thus, it is not surprising to see more Haskell projects from those particular categories than from other categories.
-
base case
This is great for understanding what libraries to use in the Haskell ecosystem: https://github.com/Gabriella439/post-rfc/blob/main/sotu.md
-
Haskell for beginners
In particular, I got comfortable reading hackage documentation to understand quickly how to use libraries (aeson, megaparsec, mtl, pipes, etc), got comfortable with the ecosystem (this helped: https://github.com/Gabriella439/post-rfc/blob/main/sotu.md), got comfortable with the main language idioms and features (https://smunix.github.io/dev.stephendiehl.com/hask/tutorial.pdf) and got comfortable with simple things that for some reason had confused me before (case, \case, let).
- What can I do in Haskell? UwU
-
Is there "Are We <#$%&> Yet" type of websites for Haskell?
Gabriella Gonzalez has a great doc that is reasonably up-to-date, sounds similar to what you're looking for? https://github.com/Gabriella439/post-rfc/blob/main/sotu.md
- What I wish I had known about voice feminization from the beginning
-
Haskell for Artificial Intelligence?
With that being said, Python is without a doubt the best option, and I'd also be very interested to read the articles you found that say that Python is not a good choice because it's been the industry standard for a long time now. Data science and machine learning are one of the areas where the Haskell ecosystem is not as strong as other languages, but libraries and tools do exist. There's a great list of Haskell resources by domain here, and as you can see, there are Haskell bindings to tensorflow and pytorch, along with other libraries that support common data science programming.
text
- Super Colliding Nix Stores: Nix Flakes for Millions of Developers
-
The Spinnaker Programming Language
String is a linked list of UTF-32 codepoints, which is just as bad as it sounds. Haskell programmers usually use Text from the text package instead.
-
[ANN] GHCup-0.1.19.0 released
This is the first release that was executed via the new GitHub CI. Everything went smoothly, except for an unexpected packaging bug on windows due to text-2.0 linking against libstdc++ by default.
-
Limits of possible performance improvements of Haskell/GHC code?
In addition to what's mentioned, the "default" libraries people use are often not the best-performing ones. E.g. Data.Vector.Hashtables is often much faster than Data.HashMap.Strict (which again is typically faster than Data.Map). And we find performance papercuts in common libraries that may simply be due to not enough people optimising for speed.
-
What is the idiomatic way to test "hidden" module functions in a Cabal project
Used by nearly every Haskell project: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/text 60% of the modules are ".Internal".
- Monthly Hask Anything (June 2022)
-
Haskell - Important Libraries
text
-
Switch internal representation to UTF8 by Bodigrim · Pull Request #365 · haskell/text
Here is a representative patch for text: https://github.com/haskell/text/pull/365/commits/37a2157245457a287d638bbceb472fe93b71f224 Hopefully it clarifies why achieving C performance is problematic even if you have enough primitive operations.
- Size hints for streams in text package
-
Can I wait forever without getLine?
I want to run an app in a Docker container, but detached. This causes getLine to throw an EOF exception, since the terminal detaches. That is, if I understand this thread correctly https://github.com/haskell/text/issues/258.
What are some alternatives?
ihp - 🔥 The fastest way to build type safe web apps. IHP is a new batteries-included web framework optimized for longterm productivity and programmer happiness
attempt - Concrete data type for handling extensible exceptions as failures.
envy - :angry: Environmentally friendly environment variables
base58string - Bitcoin script compilation, manipulation and decompilation
hackage-server - Hackage-Server: A Haskell Package Repository
algebraic-classes - Conversions between algebraic classes and F-algebras.
rlua - High level Lua bindings to Rust
text-trie - An efficient finite map from Text to values, based on bytestring-trie.
awesome-haskell - A collection of awesome Haskell links, frameworks, libraries and software. Inspired by awesome projects line.
text-ansi
hoogle - Haskell API search engine
gps2htmlReport - Generates a HTML page report detailing a GPS journey, with charts, statistics and an OpenStreetMap graphic.