Language and library specification

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The Haskell 2010 report

The Haskell 2010 report was published in July 2010, and is the current definition of the Haskell language. It is freely available online, in the following formats:

Note that these documents are intended to define Haskell and are not appropriate for learning Haskell. For the latter have a look at the Haskell bookshelf.

If you find a mistake in the report, please send it to the haskell-prime mailing list (you have to register first), or send it directly to one of the current committee members.

The sources for the Haskell report are also available:

The Haskell 98 report

The Haskell 98 (Revised) Report is published by Cambridge University Press, as a book "Haskell 98 language and libraries: the Revised Report", and also as a Special Issue of the Journal of Functional Programming 13(1) Jan 2003.

The Haskell 98 report is also available online in a number of formats:

A complete list of all changes made to both reports between the Jan 1999 publication and the Revised Report (Dec 2002).

The source for the Report is in a publicly visible CVS repository. If you render the report in a new way that others may wish to use, please let us know and we'll add it to this web page. If you have any other ways to package the report please let us know and we'll add them.

The report still has minor bugs. There are tracked at the Haskell 98 bugs page. Report any new bugs to Malcolm Wallace.

Addenda to the report

These addenda to the Haskell 98 report were both incorporated in the Haskell 2010 report, so they are included here only for historical interest.

Finalised:

  1. Foreign Function Interface (FFI)

Candidates:

  1. Hierarchical modules

Future revisions of the language

Language revisions are expected to be produced once per year, starting with Haskell 2010. The continuous revision process is called Haskell Prime.

Related work

Language.Haskell
A lexer, parser and pretty printer for Haskell, available in the haskell-src library
Typing Haskell in Haskell
A Haskell program that implements a Haskell typechecker, thus providing a mathematically rigorous specification in a notation that is familiar to Haskell users. Its web page is cached here.
[1]
Core language operational semantics in Twelf.
[2]
A space semantics for the core language. Adam Bakewell. Proc. 2000 Haskell Workshop. September 2001.
A Systematic Derivation of the STG Machine Verified in Coq
Pirog and Dariusz Biernacki, 2010
STG machine model
Formally verifying an STG machine
A specification for the module system

Historic development of Haskell

The Haskell 98 report was released in February 1999; it is a refinement and simplification of Haskell 1.4. See the Haskell 98 page for more details on Haskell 98 and changes from Haskell 1.4.

The definition of Haskell version 1.4 was finished in April 1997. It contains just minor changes with respect to version 1.3 from May 1996, whereas the step from version 1.2 to version 1.3 was quite large.

Old definitions of the semantics of Haskell:

A static semantics for Haskell
Simon Peyton Jones and Philip Wadler, Unpublished Technical Report, University of Glasgow, 1991, 49 pages.
A Dynamic Semantics for Haskell (Draft)
Kevin Hammond and Cordelia Hall, University of Glasgow, 1992, 23 pages.