
Also, this is a complete aside but what the heck. :-) Has anyone else been driven crazy by the way that Java code and libraries are documented? It seems like whenever I try to figure out how to use a piece of Java code, the functionality is spread out over a huge collection of classes and methods so that it is impossible to figure out where things actually happen and how the code is supposed to be used. Am I correct to perceive this as a general trend in Java, or is it just the projects that I looked at and/or my lack of experience in how Java sources and libraries are organize? Cheers, Greg On 10/28/10 9:53 PM, aditya siram wrote:
I understand your frustration at not having free tested libs ready-to-go, Java/any-other-mainstream-language programmers tend to expect this and usually get it.
If a lack of libs is a dealbreaker for you and you want to use a functional programming language with some of Haskell's advantages (like immutability, lazy data structures and STM) I encourage you to check out Clojure [1] a nicely designed Lisp. It is tightly integrated in to the JVM and you have access to all the Java libs you want.
-deech
2010/10/27 Günther Schmidt
mailto:gue.schmidt@web.de> Hi Malcolm,
well if I would like to point out that, for instance, Haskell exists for a lot more than 10 years now, and that, while the language per se rocks, and there are cool tools (cabal) and libraries (list, Set, Map), there still isn't even a mail client library, I wonder whom to escalate this to, and who is going to do something about it.
I understand some parties wish to avoid success at all costs, while others, commercial users, benefit from the edge haskell gives them already and which probably can help themselves in case of, again, for instance a missing mail client library.
And then there is the ones like me, which also want to benefit from the edge Haskell gives them over users of other languages and want to develop Real World Apps and who cannot easily help themselves in case of a missing mail client library.
So while there are many aspects of the future of haskell, who effectively is it that steers the boat?
Günther
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