wiwinwlh
fp-course
wiwinwlh | fp-course | |
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5 | 5 | |
2,528 | 1,027 | |
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0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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wiwinwlh
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Počeo da učim Haskell
wiwibwlh
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Update on The Haskell Guide
In this respect, The Haskell Guide is not a tutorial, project-based guide or textbook, which aims to give a more complete walk through the language, in a linear fashion, but more like a reference guide that is carefully designed to be accessible and clear. In that respect, it's like a beginner level version of What I Wish I Knew When I Learned Haskell, with more cross-referencing. (By the way, I don't think this is a substitute for more in-depth or didactically rich resources at all; it's trying to address a different problem.)
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Wren is a small, fast, class-based concurrent scripting language
Many libraries try to stick to Haskell 98. Also whenever someone writes a paper about some new techniques, they always seem to take a lot of pleasure in pointing out when their technique works in Haskell 98.
I like that you can mix and match GHC extensions even in the same project. So one library (or even just one module) might use some crazy and messy extensions, but you can still use it from vanilla Haskell.
http://dev.stephendiehl.com/hask/#language-extensions has a list of extensions and some judgement on them.
For example, I really like TupleSections. They are not strictly necessary for anything, they are purely cosmetic / syntactic sugar. But they also don't cause any mess. https://ghc.gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/doc/users_guide/exts/tupl...
Also: TypedHoles are really neat for developing, and will never show up in your final code. https://ghc.gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/doc/users_guide/exts/type...
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How was your study routine to become good at haskell?
Maybe try to implement something using Haskell? For example, try to read through: https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Write_Yourself_a_Scheme_in_48_Hours to see how the concepts are used in a "real world" setting. Also, https://github.com/sdiehl/wiwinwlh is an underrated resource imo. Anyways, the best way to learn Haskell is to just use it. I'm still learning myself, so I don't have much to say beyond that.
fp-course
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Monthly Hask Anything (January 2023)
fp-course ?
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How was your study routine to become good at haskell?
Fp-course exercise
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Why is Learning Functional Programming So Damned Hard?
there is the fp-course https://github.com/tonymorris/fp-course - I think this was forked a lot - maybe a bit more involved
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Code review request for fp-course (List, Functor, Applicative, Monad)
You could always compare your solutions to the solution repo: https://github.com/tonymorris/fp-course
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Are there any interesting programming languages based on particular data structures?
Right, so this deserves a little bit of elaboration if you're not already familiar with Haskell. Haskell source code satisfies a substitution property that source code in other languages doesn't. In Haskell, you can take any common snippet, refactor that out to a name, and invoke the name instead, and this doesn't changes the meaning of the program. Similarly, you can inline any named snippet at its invocation site without changing the meaning of the program. (Here's a good explanation of the substitution property I'm talking about, along with a demonstration of how Python, for example, does not satisfy the same substitution property: https://github.com/tonymorris/fp-course#demonstrate-io-maintains-referential-transparency.)
What are some alternatives?
course-plan - 📜 Haskell course info, plan, video lectures, slides
fp-course - Functional Programming Course
fp-notes - Notes on Functional Programming and related topics
sdl-gpu-hs
sense-lang - Sense is a very high level, functional programming language for creating software by writing only the absolute necessary information and not a single line above that.
haskell-docs
zero-bs-haskell - Learn Haskell, with tiny lessons.
haskell-handbook - Best practices on how to be efficient with Haskell in production
learn-you-a-haskell - “Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!” by Miran Lipovača
Wren - The Wren Programming Language. Wren is a small, fast, class-based concurrent scripting language.
Tiny - A very small statically-typed embeddable scripting language.
ruwren - A Rustified binding for Wren