Difference between revisions of "First-class module"

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(Creating the page with the description of concepts which forced me to create this page: Cayene language from Dependent types and Mark Shields & Simon Peyton Jones's article from Future)
 
m (Splitting the page into two titled sections (,,Haskell proposal'' vs ,,Other examples''))
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== Haskell proposals ==
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Mark Shields and Simon Peyton Jones [http://research.microsoft.com/Users/simonpj/Papers/first-class-modules/ First-class Modules for Haskell] discusses a lot of extension proposals integrated in a coherent design.
 
Mark Shields and Simon Peyton Jones [http://research.microsoft.com/Users/simonpj/Papers/first-class-modules/ First-class Modules for Haskell] discusses a lot of extension proposals integrated in a coherent design.
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== Other examples ==
   
 
[http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/cayenne/index.html Cayene] is a programming laguage influenced by Haskell, constructive type theory.
 
[http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/cayenne/index.html Cayene] is a programming laguage influenced by Haskell, constructive type theory.

Revision as of 21:07, 25 March 2006

Haskell proposals

Mark Shields and Simon Peyton Jones First-class Modules for Haskell discusses a lot of extension proposals integrated in a coherent design.

Other examples

Cayene is a programming laguage influenced by Haskell, constructive type theory. Bacause it has also Dependent types, it can leverage them so that it is not forced to have a separate module language and a core language.