Difference between revisions of "List of Projects that use Haskell"
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; Successful |
; Successful |
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: The project should be maintained and have a non-trivial user base. |
: The project should be maintained and have a non-trivial user base. |
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+ | == Projects == |
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+ | |||
+ | ; [http://darcs.net/ darcs] |
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+ | : a distributed version control system |
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+ | ; [http://xmonad.org/ xmonad] |
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+ | : a tiling X window manager |
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+ | ; [http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/ pandoc] |
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+ | : a universal document converter |
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+ | ; [http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Timeplot Timeplot] |
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+ | : a program for visualizing data from log files |
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+ | ; [http://hledger.org/ hledger] |
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+ | : a personal finance tracker |
Revision as of 15:43, 22 October 2012
People often ask, «Okay, Haskell looks like a fun language; but what's written in it?»
The purpose of this page is to create a list of Haskell-based projects.
Requirements
To qualify, the project should meet these requirements:
- Programs, not libraries
- The project should be of value to the end user. Programs that are configured by writing a small piece of Haskell code (xmonad, yi) or that expose a Haskell-based DSL are okay.
- A significant part is written in Haskell
- As a rough guideline, no less that 30% of the source code should be Haskell.
- Open source
- Not necessarily «free as speech», but people should be able to try it out and look at the source code.
- Valuable outside of the Haskell community
- Haskell infrastructure is almost entirely written in Haskell, but that isn't very useful in selling Haskell to outsiders. Tools that work with other languages are okay (e.g. a Perl6 compiler written in Haskell) are okay.
- Successful
- The project should be maintained and have a non-trivial user base.