Hi Rudy,

Your email gave the motivation to also release my own cheat sheet that I had been compiling for some time now...
It is a bit more focused, namely it aims to ilustrate (some of) the differences among typeclasses, namely monoid, semigroup, alt, aplicative, monad, etc.

But I agree, there's clear room for improvement over that 14 long pages version - that I hardly call a cheat sheet.

http://fundeps.com/tables/FromSemigroupToMonads.pdf

http://fundeps.com/posts/cheatsheets/2014-03-04-cheat-sheets/

Cheers,
Joćo


2014-03-04 11:12 GMT+00:00 Rudy Matela <rudy@matela.com.br>:
Hello, All,

Some time ago, I was looking for a Haskell Cheat Sheet, to help me
remember Haskell's syntax and common functions.  I've found one, but
it was quite long (14 pages), not what I was looking for.

So, I've started building a Haskell Cheat Sheet with the most common
language features condensed in two pages.  It still needs a lot of
improvement (and some content).  I'm using LaTeX and I've built a
"cls" (so it can be used to create Sheets for other languages as
well), it is kind of a hack for now.

If someone wants to use it as a reference, the first version can be
found on [1] and the TeX source can be found on GitHub [2].

I would appreciate help on it: feel free to fork and make pull
requests with new additions (or mail me asking for push permissions).

Regards,
Rudy

[1]: https://matela.com.br/pub/cheat-sheets/haskell-ucs-0.1.pdf
[2]: https://github.com/rudymatela/ultimate-cheat-sheets
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