Brian
Great!
You might like to consider using GHC as a library
http://haskell.org/haskellwiki/GHC/As_a_library
The advantage is that you just “import GHC” and then you can
parse all of Haskell (including GHC’s extensions). Then you can rename it to
resolve lexical scopes, typecheck, and so on. It will certainly deal with all
of Darcs… because GHC compiles Darcs.
It’s all supposed to be a good basis for tools that consume and
analyse Haskell programs, which is exactly what you propose to do. Example,
there’s a summer-of-code project to use it for Haddock.
That said, the API is really just what we needed to build GHC
itself. It needs a serious design effort. One of the things that would motivate
such an effort would be “customers” saying “I needed to do X with the API and
it was inconvenient/impossible”. Still, it does work, today.
Simon
From:
haskell-cafe-bounces@haskell.org [mailto:haskell-cafe-bounces@haskell.org] On
Behalf Of Brian Smith
Sent: 17 August 2006 17:01
To: haskell-cafe@haskell.org
Subject: [Haskell-cafe] Description of Haskell extensions used by
FPTOOLS
Is there any design document for the FPTOOLS libraries or
some description of language features that are (allowed to be) used in them?
I am going to be taking some significant time off from my normal jobs in the
upcoming months. During part of that time, I would like to do some work to
improve the Haskell toolchain. This involves creating or improving tools that
parse and analyze Haskell code. My goal is to have these tools support enough
of Haskell to be able to handle at least the most important libraries used by
Haskell programmers. In particular, this includes all or most of the libraries
in FPTOOLS. Plus, I want these tools to operate on Darcs as it is an obvious
poster-child for Haskell. Thus, I need to support Haskell 98 plus all the
extensions being used in Darcs and FPTOOLS as of approx. March, 2007 (as I
intened to start working again at that time).
It would be very nice if there was some document that described "Haskell
98 plus all the extensions being used in Darcs and FPTOOLS as of March,
2007." Besides being useful to me, it would be a useful guide for
potential contributors to FPTOOLS.
Regards,
Brian