Manu, Did you skip over the dozens of links at haskell.org answering exactly these questions? There are links to some great tutorials [1] and IRC information where you can get real-time help [2]. Also there are some good books [3]. I think most "recent" learners learned from YAHT [4], Gentle Introduction [5], and LYAH [6]. I personall read [3] & [4] and eventually discovered [7], which is well written but last I checked isn't nearly a complete tutorial. Thomas On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:35 AM, Max Rabkin <max.rabkin@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Manu
Depending on your style, you might prefer Real World Haskell (available online or in print) or Learn You A Haskell (http://learnyouahaskell.com/).
Of course, there are others, but my personal preference is for LYAH.
--Max
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 7:14 PM, Manu Gupta <manugupt1@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear anyone, I wish to learn HASKELL. However my institution does not teach it so plus I don't have a clue how to get around with it. Everything seems so unconventional and out of place Can you help me out in getting good tutorials that will help me to learn HASKELL by myself so that I can pursue it as a serious programming languages Till now I have referred Haskell wiki and have tried everywhere but does not seem to learn it PLZ, PLZ HELP ME OUT
-- Regards MANU
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