The first one means that you gave a type signature for a function you did not define.
The second one means that there are 2 last2 type signature, but you can only have one.
What you want is something like :
last2 :: [a] - > a
last2 list = (put your function here)
On Sun, 9 Nov 2014 21:02 Roelof Wobben <r.wobben@home.nl> wrote:
Thanks,
I changed it to this :
last2::[a]-> a
last2::last[a]
but now I see these error messages:
src/Main.hs@1:1-1:6 The type signature forlast2 lacks an accompanying bindingsrc/Main.hs@2:1-2:6 Duplicate type signatures for last2
at /home/app/isolation-runner-work/projects/75679/session.207/src/src/Main.hs:1:1-5
/home/app/isolation-runner-work/projects/75679/session.207/src/src/Main.hs:2:1-5 src/Main.hs@2:1-2:6The type signature for last2 lacks an accompanying binding
akash g schreef op 9-11-2014 10:48:
_______________________________________________The naming convention for variables and functions is that they should start with a lower case letter. Types have capitalized names.
On Sun, Nov 9, 2014 at 3:12 PM, Roelof Wobben <r.wobben@home.nl> wrote:
Hello, I try to solve the 99 haskell problems on several ways. But my first try which looks like this : Last2::[a]-> a Last2:: last[list] gives the following error message : src/Main.hs@1:1-1:6 Invalid type signature: Last2 :: [a] -> a Should be of form <variable> :: <type> What am trying to do is say the input is a list which can be of integers or chars so everything is the output can then also be of type everything. Roelof
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