
HyperHaskell
Nifty!
- How does this compare to jupyter (ipython) with the haskell kernel?
The overall goal is obviously very similar. To me, the main differences are * HyperHaskell should be easy to install (e.g. only cabal and a binary download) * HyperHaskell behaves more like a desktop application, e.g. worksheets are loaded from and saved to the local file system. The latter point is actually the main reason why I couldn't get into Jupyter at all: It insisted that I manage worksheets in some kind of database in the browser. Ugh! (There may be other front-ends nowadays, but last I checked, I didn't find anything official or popular, that's why I decided to write my own thing.) On the flip side, HyperHaskell is specialized to Haskell -- you can't use it with other languages.
- Is it on GitHub or somewhere?
Not yet, it's still in the "hype" phase. ;-) Expect the following location https://github.com/HeinrichApfelmus/hyper-haskell to fill with code in a week or two. Best regards, Heinrich Apfelmus -- http://apfelmus.nfshost.com Moritz Angermann wrote:
http://apfelmus.nfshost.com/temp/hyper-haskell-sneak-peek.png
It's a project that I'm currently working on, called
HyperHaskell - the strongly hyped Haskell interpreter -
Well, it's supposed to be strongly hyped, but currently, only few people know about it. Could you give me a hand with, uh, hyping this? I'm not good at this.
Nifty!
- How does this compare to jupyter (ipython) with the haskell kernel? - Is it on GitHub or somewhere?
Cheers, Moritz
_______________________________________________ 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.