Something I'm not clear on, with regard to 'stack ghc', is how to tell stack what environment, modules, etc. to use -- when I run it on a file that is not within my stack directory tree. I tried simple running 'stack ghc filename.hs' and it couldn't find any of my libraries. I also cannot figure out how to pass arguments to ghc.

D

On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 11:27 PM, Michael Snoyman <michael@snoyman.com> wrote:
Have you tried `stack ghc filename.hs`? Also, you could try the script interpreter approach, with something like this:

#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack --resolver lts-8.12 script --compile
main = putStrLn "Hello World"

Running `stack filename.hs` will compile and run your file, and you can reuse the resulting executable.

On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 9:03 AM, Dennis Raddle <dennis.raddle@gmail.com> wrote:
Using stack, but I have a need to build lots of executables. **lots** and new ones all the time .. my application is music playback. I used to have a single executable for playing music, and used it for all compositions. I later found that I needed to do a lot of configuration specific to each composition, and that the most natural language for specifying all the data and functions specific to a composition was Haskell. That means I have a source file for every composition, in the same directory where I store that composition (as a Sibelius file). But a couple things. (1) they aren't in the stack tree, (2) I don't want to add every one of these to a cabal file. 

What is the best way to approach this goal?

D


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