Applications and libraries/Extended Haskell: Difference between revisions
RossPaterson (talk | contribs) (note that GHC supports arrow notation directly) |
(removal of FRP section (since FRP it isn’t a language extension); will be moved to a new “Reactive Programming” article) |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
;[http://www.haskell.org/arrows/ Arrows] | ;[http://www.haskell.org/arrows/ Arrows] | ||
:Ross Paterson has developed a preprocessor that provides a nice notation for Arrows, a generalization of monads. This notation has been supported directly by [http://www.haskell.org/ghc GHC] since version 6.4, so the preprocessor is only needed for other implementations. | :Ross Paterson has developed a preprocessor that provides a nice notation for Arrows, a generalization of monads. This notation has been supported directly by [http://www.haskell.org/ghc GHC] since version 6.4, so the preprocessor is only needed for other implementations. | ||
Latest revision as of 10:51, 24 January 2008
- The copyright status of this work is not known. Please help resolve this on the talk page.
This page contains a list of libraries and tools in a certain category. For a comprehensive list of such pages, see Applications and libraries.
Extended Haskell
The purpose of these systems is to enhance the capabilities of Haskell in some way. These are not targeted at any specific application domains.
- HaRP
- A Haskell extension that extends the normal pattern matching facility with the power of regular expressions.