I've tried doing haskell projects on fedora ubuntu and gentoo and gentoo was by far
the best supported.

-Dan

On 4/22/07, David Cabana < dcabana@nc.rr.com> wrote:
I'm not dissing Windows; I work with it all the time, just not for
Haskell. On the other hand, I am writing this on my Powerbook.

My desire to use linux is mostly aesthetic. I want to go mouse free
(I'm thinking Xmonad), and neither Windows nor OS X naturally lends
itself to that.  With respect to choice of linux, the machine I have
in mind is not terribly fast, so I prefer to install from binaries
rather than source.  Do  Debian and Ubuntu provide more or less the
same Haskell packages?

On Apr 22, 2007, at 10:09 AM, Neil Mitchell wrote:

> Hi David,
>
> At the risk of getting into an OS war, its perfectly feasible to
> develop Haskell on Windows. Some Haskell applications are only
> available for Windows (WinHugs mainly), but you are likely to have a
> less bumpy ride compiling GHC if you aren't on Windows.
>
> Pick what you want, Gentoo and Debian are both quite well supported
> for Haskell.
>
> Thanks
>
> Neil
>
> On 4/22/07, David Cabana <dcabana@nc.rr.com> wrote:
>> I have a spare Windows machine I want to put to better use.  I want
>> to turn it into a Haskell hacking box, and was wondering whether any
>> particular *nix or BSD distribution is best (or worst) suited for
>> this.  Any thoughts?
>>
>> Thank you,
>> David Cabana
>> _______________________________________________
>> Haskell-Cafe mailing list
>> Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
>> http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
>>

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