
ML for the Working Programmer is roughly equivalent of SICP but uses
SML instead of Scheme. It also covers most (?) of the SML language
whereas SICP is not really a book about (MIT-) Scheme.
The closest Haskell equivalent might be the second edition of Graham
Hutton's Programming in Haskell from what I've seen of the press
release and table of contents. The first edition was very much a short
and readable introduction to functional programming in Haskell (not
covering all of the Haskell language). It looks the second edition
takes a significantly deeper look at Haskell the language.
On 6 August 2016 at 22:11, Damian
Can you enumerate which features you liked about that book, and which topics it covered?
Op 6 aug. 2016 22:53 schreef "Lawrence Bottorff"
: Is there a book or books that cover as much, as well as the Lawrence Paulson "ML for the Working Programmer (2nd ed)" for Haskell? What I'd like in Haskell form is pretty much exactly what Paulson covers in his brilliant book.
LB
_______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list To (un)subscribe, modify options or view archives go to: http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe Only members subscribed via the mailman list are allowed to post.
_______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list To (un)subscribe, modify options or view archives go to: http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe Only members subscribed via the mailman list are allowed to post.