
William Stein just sent me a nice note follwing up on this: "I run SageMathCloud. If there are any libraries you want installed, just let me know (wstein@uw.edu). And if there is anything I should do to improve support for Haskell in SMC, let me know. Thanks, — William” For those unfamiliar with SMC by the way, here is a nice post that he recently wrote about it and the vision behind it (aspects of which, I’m sure are shared by many in the Haskell community). http://sagemath.blogspot.com/2014/08/what-is-sagemathcloud-lets-clear-some.h... Cheers, g. On August 25, 2014 at 10:10:22 PM, Gershom B (gershomb@gmail.com) wrote:
One more suggestion then :-) SageMathCloud (https://cloud.sagemath.com/) now has ghc 7.6.3 running on it. It has a nice webeditor with haskell syntax highlighting and sharing of .hs files, and you can also pop open a terminal in the browser and interact with ghci directly. This basically gives a minimal unixy environment to play with the repl without having to do any installation work, etc.
It isn’t necessarly rich with libraries, etc. But for giving a “real ghc” experience without the install, it might not be bad.
—g
On August 25, 2014 at 3:30:52 PM, Richard Eisenberg (eir@cis.upenn.edu) wrote:
Thanks for the many, varied responses to my query. I've learned more about all these tools!
Just to close the loop, though: I've decided not to go with any of these tools because of lack of REPL support. My approach to Haskell will not start with `main`, and I want students to get used to just writing functions first, before writing programs.
Thanks again for the pointers, Richard
On Aug 25, 2014, at 1:35 PM, Michael Snoyman wrote:
On Sat, Aug 23, 2014 at 9:41 PM, Brandon Allbery wrote: On Sat, Aug 23, 2014 at 2:36 PM, Richard Eisenberg wrote: Does anyone know of a website where I can write a few lines of Haskell and have them run?
http://ideone.com (ghc 7.6.3) fpcomplete.com's online IDE has a free/community tier, although for this I suspect
you can't meet the ToS
Just to follow up publicly: the FP Complete terms of service should *not* prevent any
kind of usage in this case. We're in the process of revising our ToS to make it clearer with the upcoming open publish model, but the simple explanation of that model is: you can do whatever you want in the IDE, but- like Github- all commits will be publicly viewable.
If anyone has questions about this, feel free to contact me.
Michael
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