Typically, you programming with procedural mindset in an imperative language, but programming with mathematical mindset in a functional language. The difference in methodology would require difference in choices of methods / tactics.

On 2020-12-01, at 09:13, Gregory Guthrie <guthrie@miu.edu> wrote:

Sem like there are *many* standard examples around, IntelliJ, Eclipse, Netbeans, etc.
 
Are there specific reasons that a Haskell IDE would be different in features??
 
Is there something lacking in use of (say) the standard IntelliJ IDE for Haskell?
 
 
Dr. Gregory Guthrie
Maharishi International University
----------------------------------------------------------------
 
From: Haskell-Cafe <haskell-cafe-bounces@haskell.org> On Behalf Of MarLinn
Sent: Monday, November 30, 2020 7:01 PM
To: haskell-cafe@haskell.org
Subject: Re: [Haskell-cafe] What features should an (fictitious) IDE for Haskell have?
 

Most importantly: A good IDE is not a text editor, but an AST editor. If the AST happens to be presented as text, that's a choice of visualisation, nothing more. Better to start with a graph-like visualisation to free the mind, then think through the possible interactions. Maybe add the typical text-like visualisation later. But don't start there or you'll just re-invent notepad for the nth time.

Maybe don't even store the code as ascii text.

 
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