Yes, the xmonad approach is very neat, but I see 2 major (IMO) drawbacks to it:
1) The end-user has to have GHC, and all the necessary libraries to compile the configuration
2) A scripting language should be simple and QUICK to learn : Haskell is clean, powerful but its learning takes time
Uwe, I noticed kind of recently the haskeem package, I have not tried it yet and I didn't know its usability. If you say it's not made for that, then I believe you.
Maciej Piechotka wrote:But Yi is a far bigger application than what Limestraël is talking
> After change of file you have to wait a long time as it compiles and
> links with yi.
about. One of my computers is very old and much
less powerful than yours (let's just say that it has far less than
1 Gb memory in total). On that machine, xmonad, still much
larger than Limestraël's app, recompiles its configuration file
almost instantaneously. And of course, even that
fast recompile only happens when I change the configuration,
which is almost never.
I would try the xmonad approach to scripting in Haskell.
It is much simpler to implement than any of the others,
and much neater if you find that it works well.
Regards,
Yitz
_______________________________________________
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe