Research papers/Top 10

From HaskellWiki

The 10 most cited works on Haskell, as reported by Google.

Report on the programming language Haskell: a non-strict, purely functional language
Comprehending monads
Philip Wadler. Mathematical Structures in Computer Science, Special issue of selected papers from 6'th Conference on Lisp and Functional Programming, 2:461-493, 1992. (Cited by 469)
The essence of functional programming
P Wadler - ACM SIGPLAN-SIGACT symposium on Principles of programming, 1992 (Cited by 407)
Why Functional Programming Matters
John Hughes. Comput. J. 32(2): 98-107 (1989) (Cited by 357)
How to make ad-hoc polymorphism less ad hoc
Philip Wadler and Stephen Blott. 16'th Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, ACM Press, Austin, Texas, January 1989. (Cited by 326)
Imperative functional programming
SL Peyton Jones and PL Wadler, 20th ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL'93), Charleston, Jan 1993, pp71-84. (Cited by 289)
Theorems for free!
Philip Wadler. 4'th International Conference on Functional Programming and Computer Architecture, London, September 1989. (Cited by 270)
Monads for functional programming
Philip Wadler. In M. Broy, editor, Marktoberdorf Summer School on Program Design Calculi, Springer Verlag, NATO ASI Series F: Computer and systems sciences, Volume 118, August 1992. Also in J. Jeuring and E. Meijer, editors, Advanced Functional Programming, Springer Verlag, LNCS 925, 1995. (Cited by 237)
Implementing lazy functional languages on stock hardware: the Spineless Tagless G-machine
SL Peyton Jones, Journal of Functional Programming 2(2), Apr 1992, pp127-202. (Cited by 206)
Monad Transformers and Modular Interpreters
Sheng Liang, Paul Hudak, and Mark P. Jones, In Conference Record of POPL'95: 22nd ACM SIGPLAN-SIGACT Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, San Francisco, CA, January 1995 (Cited by 199)