Apparently, I had mis-specified the content type for PDF as "pdf", rather than "application/pdf," as specified in a listing of MIME types (see "Webmaster Toolkit :: listing of mime types" at http://www.webmaster-toolkit.com/mime-types.shtml). My apologies; this is a re-re-send, to ensure that future PDF attachments will also get through. -- Benjamin L. Russell On Fri, 07 Nov 2008 16:15:29 +0900, Benjamin L.Russell <DekuDekuplex@Yahoo.com> wrote:
The PDF attachment to the following forwarded message was mistakenly content-filtered away, so I have modified the filtering options to include PDF files.
This is a retransmission, with the PDF file reattached; if this attempt fails, I shall need to do some research on specifying filtering options for content types in Mailman before attempting yet another retransmission.
-- Benjamin L. Russell
On Fri, 07 Nov 2008 15:40:25 +0900, Benjamin L.Russell <DekuDekuplex@Yahoo.com> wrote:
The following one-page Haskell Quick Reference was posted earlier today on Haskell-Cafe; I am forwarding it to this list as a reference for any interested beginners.
-- Benjamin L. Russell
On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 13:41:13 +0000, in gmane.comp.lang.haskell.cafe Malcolm Wallace <Malcolm.Wallace@cs.york.ac.uk> wrote:
Some time ago, there was a thread about a "CheatSheet" for Haskell beginners. As I recall, the CheatSheet was more than 12 pages long.
For a Haskell tutorial I was running at a conference recently, I needed a "Quick Reference Guide" that would fit onto a single side of A4. So I knocked one together quickly, and it is attached as a PDF. I send it to this list, with permission for anyone to distribute it more widely as they wish, in the hope that it might be useful.
Doubtless it is incomplete, and I have no particular desire to fix errors or maintain this document, so if anyone is interested and would like to adopt it, I can pass on the editable sources. It was originally created as an Apple Numbers spreadsheet (simply for speed of creation) but could be converted to Excel or CSV, for import into other tools.
Regards, Malcolm