| The lack of response, I believe, is just a lack of anyone who
| can cut through all the noise and come up with some
| practical way to move forward in one of the many possible
| directions.
You're right.
There are a few tens of thousands of Haskell programmers now, right?
I think a significant fraction of them would in fact appreciate the basic dot syntax and namespace-fixes that TDNR proposed.
I fear that record-packages-as-libraries are unlikely to be used by a large number of people. Are they now? I love do-it-in-the-language as a principle, but I've watched it really impair the Scheme community with respect to many language features. (Recall your experiences, if you've had them, with homebrew Scheme OOP systems.) It seems hard for non-standard language extensions to gain wide use. Though, to be fair, Haskell's basic types have a history of being replaced by widely accepted alternatives (Vector, ByteString).
In spite of its limitations, was there that much of a negative response to Simon's more recent proposal?
"+1"!
This is a great bang-for-the-buck proposal; it leverages the existing multiparameter type classes in a sensible way.
I admit I'm a big fan of polymorphic extension. But I don't love it enough for it to impede progress!
Regarding extension: In trying to read through all this material I don't see a lot of love for "lacks" constraints a la TRex. As one anecdote, I've been very pleased using Daan Leijen's scoped labels approach. I implemented it for my embedded stream processing DSL (WaveScript) and wrote >10K lines of application code with it. I never once ran into a bug resulting from shadowed/duplicate fields!
Cheers,
-Ryan
But it is very telling that the vast majority of responses on
http://www.reddit.com/r/haskell/comments/nph9l/records_stalled_again_leadership_needed/
were not about the subject (leadership) but rather on suggesting yet more, incompletely-specified solutions to the original problem. My modest attempt to build a consensus by articulating the simplest solution I could think of, manifestly failed.
The trouble is that I just don't have the bandwidth (or, if I'm honest, the motivation) to drive this through to a conclusion. And if no one else does either, perhaps it isn't *that* important to anyone. That said, it clearly is *somewhat* important to a lot of people, so doing nothing isn't very satisfactory either.
Usually I feel I know how to move forward, but here I don't.
Simon