
Anyone used 'Haskell School of Music'?
On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 12:19 PM, Friedrich Wiemer wrote: Learn You a Haskell is actually my favourite book. The more advanced
topics are hard to follow, but you'll find enough materials on the web.
Additionally I really liked the section about types and their kinds. I think Real World Haskell is better suited, if you already knew some
Haskell and want to get examples for every day use. On 10/01/2013 06:14 PM, Ondrej Nekola wrote: Gentle Introduction to Haskell worked for me:
http://www.haskell.org/tutorial/ It’s outdated in theory (covers
Haskell 98) but I would not mind. Ondra @satai Nekola I am looking for a general Haskell book with syntax reference to
self-teach. I have a computer science background, so technical and
theoretical is fine. Something similar in size and scope as the
Camel book is to perl would be ideal - covering basic language
idioms, with a decent language reference, but by no means
exhaustive. I have looked at Learn You a Haskell and Real World Haskell online,
both of which were accessible but were difficult to follow beyond
the basics. I'm not sure if it's the organization of the material
or just the learning curve, so I'm open to both if these are
hands-down the favorites. Thanks, -Mike _______________________________________________
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