Pronunciation: Difference between revisions
Isaac Dupree (talk | contribs) (add !) |
Isaac Dupree (talk | contribs) (oops, don't separate cons and nil) |
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Line 44: | Line 44: | ||
| <hask> \ </hask> | | <hask> \ </hask> | ||
| lambda | | lambda | ||
|- | |||
| <hask> ! </hask> | |||
| bang; strict (in patterns or data definitions); index (in expressions) | |||
|- | |- | ||
| <hask> : </hask> | | <hask> : </hask> | ||
| cons | | cons | ||
|- | |- | ||
| <hask> [] </hask> | | <hask> [] </hask> |
Revision as of 21:06, 8 January 2008
Some notes for beginners on how to pronounce those strange Haskell operators etc.
This is just a rough start to this page. Obviously needs more work.
This can be a table with formal and informal ways of saying various operators and code snippets such as
Symbol | Pronounciation |
---|---|
->
|
maps to, to |
=
|
is |
==
|
equals |
/=
|
not-equals |
=>
|
is a witness for, implies |
.
|
dot (could be used anywhere, but especially in, for example, Data.Char.ord), ring, compose (for example, negate . (+1)), (silent) (for example, forall a. (Num a) => a) |
<-
|
drawn from, from |
-<
|
|
++
|
append |
>>=
|
bind |
>>
|
then |
\
|
lambda |
!
|
bang; strict (in patterns or data definitions); index (in expressions) |
:
|
cons |
[]
|
nil |
()
|
unit |
(,)
|
2-tuple, pair |
(a,b,c)
|
[3-]tuple [of] a, b, and c |
Example | Pronounciation |
---|---|
f :: Int -> Int
|
f has type Int to Int |
should we add informal, possibly bad suggestions like "then", "is", "gets"?