Difference between revisions of "The Monad.Reader/Issue5"
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''by Shae Erisson'' |
''by Shae Erisson'' |
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− | This month I'd like to point out [ |
+ | This month I'd like to point out [[hIDE]], the Haskell Integrated Development Environment project. This is an entirely new project that reuses the hIDE name, and integrates code and experience from previous projects such as Yi, gtk2hs, and GHC. |
Why a new IDE, and why in Haskell? For me, I've used emacs for six years, and it's just not good enough. My least favorite emacs warts include single threading, overuse of regular expressions, lack of a high quality incremental parser (semantic just doesn't cut it), and elisp. The goals of the hIDE project include solutions for all of these warts and more. If you've ever wanted an IDE with the type safety of Haskell and the dynamic loading of elisp, join the hIDE project! |
Why a new IDE, and why in Haskell? For me, I've used emacs for six years, and it's just not good enough. My least favorite emacs warts include single threading, overuse of regular expressions, lack of a high quality incremental parser (semantic just doesn't cut it), and elisp. The goals of the hIDE project include solutions for all of these warts and more. If you've ever wanted an IDE with the type safety of Haskell and the dynamic loading of elisp, join the hIDE project! |
Revision as of 19:46, 9 May 2008
Oct 1 2005
Editorial
by Shae Erisson
This month I'd like to point out hIDE, the Haskell Integrated Development Environment project. This is an entirely new project that reuses the hIDE name, and integrates code and experience from previous projects such as Yi, gtk2hs, and GHC.
Why a new IDE, and why in Haskell? For me, I've used emacs for six years, and it's just not good enough. My least favorite emacs warts include single threading, overuse of regular expressions, lack of a high quality incremental parser (semantic just doesn't cut it), and elisp. The goals of the hIDE project include solutions for all of these warts and more. If you've ever wanted an IDE with the type safety of Haskell and the dynamic loading of elisp, join the hIDE project!
As always, The Monad.Reader invites submissions on Haskell and related topics. Send a summary or abstract for your article to Shae Erisson.
Contents
- Haskell: A Very Different Language
- by John Goerzen
- Generating Polyominoes
- by Dominic Fox
- HRay:A Haskell ray tracer
- by Kenneth Hoste
- Number-parameterized types
- by Oleg Kiselyov
- A Practical Approach to Graph Manipulation
- by Jean Philippe Bernardy
- Software Testing With Haskell
- by Shae Erisson