My Functional Programming journey was filled with dead ends, false starts, failed attempts and frustration. And I suspect that I’m not alone in this struggle. So why is this a common problem…
Learn more about how the Rust programming language shares many of the advantages offered by Haskell such as a strong type system, great tooling, polymorphism, immutability, concurrency, and great software testing methodologies. Rust is a good choice when you need to squeeze in extra performance.
Historically, I’ve struggled to find a concise, simple way to explain what it means to practice type-driven design. Too often, when someone asks me “How did you come up with this approach?” I find I can’t give them a satisfying answer. ...
I’ve written this article series, to help you get a good sense of how production Haskell is written at a company like Klarna and what to avoid along the road.
This guide will use JavaScript instead of a pure functional programming language (e.g. Haskell) to make things more approachable for developers accustomed to imperative languages. It will, however, assume you have basic knowledge of functional programming, including currying and lambdas.
The 2018 Haskell User Survey shows very high satisfaction with Haskell’s security, quality, reliability, maintainability, and advanced capabilities, writes FP Complete’s CEO Aaron Contorer. InfoQ has taken the chance to speak with him about Haskell’s current and future landscape.
Reflex FRP is a composable, cross-platform functional reactive programming framework for Haskell. It allows you to build interactive components in pure functional style, working in harmony with established Haskell techniques and improving the quality and elegance of your applications.
Reflex FRP is a composable, cross-platform functional reactive programming framework for Haskell. It allows you to build interactive components in pure functional style, working in harmony with established Haskell techniques and improving the quality and elegance of your applications.
A full stack, reactive architecture for general purpose programming. Algebraic and monadically composable primitives for concurrency, parallelism, event handling, transactions, multithreading, Web, and distributed computing with complete de-inversion of control (No callbacks, no blocking, pure state)
A double pack: - Jasper talks about Getting things done in Haskell (adapted from his 2017 Haskell eXchange talk ) - Simon and Jasper talk about organizing th...
Screencast of a talk given by Simon Meier at the HaskellerZ Meetup in Zürich on 28 Aug 2014. The blaze-react library uses Facebook's ReactJS library to do ...
Haskell has a rich library ecosystem and is well-suited for these tasks but I concede that there might be a systemic lack of introductory material for many domain specific tasks. Something that many projects and companies are trying to remedy.
When I recently asked a roomful of developers, if there’s anyone who had learned a new language this year, only very few hands went up. A year ago today, that would have been me in the audience, keeping my hands down. … And it was like this, until Haskell ruined it for me!
We would like to use the Coq proof assistant to mechanically verify properties of Haskell programs. To that end,we present a tool, named hs-to-coq, that translates total Haskell programs into Coq programs via a shallow embedding.
This site will show how to write the concurrency section of A Tour of Go in Haskell. A Tour of Go is a famous tutorial of Go. Haskell has concurrency features similar to Go: lightweight thread, channel, etc.. So it should be interesting to compare equivalent concurrent programs in Haskell and Go.
Most Haskell tutorials on the web use a style of teaching akin to language reference manuals. They show you the syntax of the language, a few language constructs, then tell you to create a few simple functions at the interactive prompt. The "hard stuff" of how to write a functioning, useful program is left to the end, or omitted entirely. This tutorial takes a different approach.
This is Learn You a Haskell, the funkiest way to learn Haskell, which is the best functional programming language around. You may have heard of it. This guide is meant for people who have programmed already, but have yet to try functional programming.