Difference between revisions of "Meta-tutorial"
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One size does not fit all! The meta-tutorial aims to help you find the Haskell tutorials that '''you''' need. |
One size does not fit all! The meta-tutorial aims to help you find the Haskell tutorials that '''you''' need. |
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+ | == Haskell in general == |
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+ | # Are you new to programming? |
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+ | #* If so, see: [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Haskell The Haskell wikibook] and [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/YAHT Yet Another Haskell Tutorial?] |
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+ | # Are you new to functional programming? |
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+ | #* If so, see: |
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+ | #* If not, see: |
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+ | # Do you just want to see what Haskell looks like at a glance? |
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+ | #* If so, see: [[How to read Haskell]] and A Tour of the Haskell Syntax |
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== Monads == |
== Monads == |
Revision as of 14:22, 27 December 2006
- what i would like is a meta-tutorial
- a list of questions about haskell, what does this do, do you understand this etc
- and if you say no, it points you at a tutorial which explains it -- ndm on #haskell
One size does not fit all! The meta-tutorial aims to help you find the Haskell tutorials that you need.
Haskell in general
- Are you new to programming?
- If so, see: The Haskell wikibook and Yet Another Haskell Tutorial?
- Are you new to functional programming?
- If so, see:
- If not, see:
- Do you just want to see what Haskell looks like at a glance?
- If so, see: How to read Haskell and A Tour of the Haskell Syntax
Monads
- Are you new to Haskell?
- If so, see:
- Do you learn best by doing exercises?
- If so, see:
- Do you learn best by metaphor and visual analogy?
- If so, see:
- Do you understand category theory?
- If so, see: