Concurrency demos: Difference between revisions
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[[ | This page collects examples of concurrent and parallel programming in Haskell. | ||
[[ | |||
== Examples == | |||
* [[/Zeta |Riemann's Zeta function approximation]] | |||
* [[/Graceful exit|Signal that you want to gracefully exit another thread]] | |||
* [[/Two reader threads|Passing messages across a single chan to two reades]] | |||
== More examples == | |||
A large range of small demonstration programs for using concurrent and | A large range of small demonstration programs for using concurrent and | ||
parallel Haskell are in the Haskell [http://darcs.haskell.org/testsuite/tests/ghc-regress/concurrent/should_run/ concurrency regression tests]. In particular, they show the use of <hask>MVars</hask> and <hask>forkIO</hask>. | parallel Haskell are in the Haskell [http://darcs.haskell.org/testsuite/tests/ghc-regress/concurrent/should_run/ concurrency regression tests]. In particular, they show the use of <hask>MVars</hask> and <hask>forkIO</hask>. | ||
[[Category:Tutorials]] | |||
[[Category:Code]] | |||
Revision as of 01:56, 13 December 2006
This page collects examples of concurrent and parallel programming in Haskell.
Examples
- Riemann's Zeta function approximation
- Signal that you want to gracefully exit another thread
- Passing messages across a single chan to two reades
More examples
A large range of small demonstration programs for using concurrent and
parallel Haskell are in the Haskell concurrency regression tests. In particular, they show the use of MVars
and forkIO
.