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BASICS OF HASKELL
Basics of Haskell. 1. Calling functions 27 Mar 2013 Bartosz Milewski. Basic function call syntax. Without it you can't read any Haskell program. 2. My First Program 28 Dec 2013 Bartosz Milewski. Defining simple functions. 3.SIMPLE EXAMPLES
As of March 2020, School of Haskell has been switched to read-onlymode.
5: TYPE CLASSES
5: Type Classes. 8 Nov 2013 Brent Yorgey View Markdown source. As of March 2020, School of Haskell has been switched to read-only mode. Haskell's particular brand of polymorphism is known as parametric polymorphism. Essentially, this means that polymorphic functions must work uniformly for any input type. This turns out to have someinteresting
A LITTLE LENS STARTER TUTORIAL A lens is a first-class reference to a subpart of some data type. For instance, we have _1 which is the lens that "focuses on" the first element of a pair. Given a lens there are essentially three things you might want to do. View the subpart. Modify the whole by changing thesubpart.
9. EVALUATOR
9. Evaluator. Now that we know how to parse arithmetic expressions, let's talk about evaluating our parse trees. First, let's implement the simplified evaluator which ignores symbolic variables. This turns out to be a very simple operation: you traverse the expression tree and evaluate every node. Our leaf nodes are literal numbersBASIC LENSING
Basic Lensing. Lenses, also known as functional references, are a powerful way of looking at, constructing, and using functions on complex data types. They're also, unfortunately, a very new and complex subject making them challenging to learn. This tutorial intends to help lay out the basics of lensing. I'm here assuming thatyou're familiar
3. SOFTWARE TRANSACTIONAL MEMORY 3. Software Transactional Memory. Software Transactional Memory is a promising new approach to the challenge of concurrency, as I will explain in this section. I shall explain STM using Haskell, the most beautiful programming language I know, because STM fits into Haskell particularly elegantly. If you don’t know any Haskell, don’t worry RANDOM NUMBERS IN HASKELL Getting a random sequence. Fortunately, there are much easier ways to get random sequences from a generator. Sequences are generated by randomRs and randoms. The first takes a range tuple and a generator as arguments: import System.Random main = do gDetails
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