
Hello all, I'm interested in a freely available fast paced haskell tutorial. By fast paced, I means I want something that goes through basic in a very fast pace, presents a couple of examples and then talks about more advanced features. A set of tutorials would be also good. References to these kind of tutorials would be great. Cheers, -- Paulo Jorge Matos - pocm at soton.ac.uk http://www.personal.soton.ac.uk/pocm PhD Student @ ECS University of Southampton, UK

http://halogen.note.amherst.edu/~jdtang/scheme_in_48/tutorial/overview.html
is pretty fast-paced. You also may want to check out
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Haskell where you can pretty much go at
your own pace.
On 10/11/07, Paulo J. Matos
Hello all,
I'm interested in a freely available fast paced haskell tutorial. By fast paced, I means I want something that goes through basic in a very fast pace, presents a couple of examples and then talks about more advanced features. A set of tutorials would be also good. References to these kind of tutorials would be great.
Cheers, -- Paulo Jorge Matos - pocm at soton.ac.uk http://www.personal.soton.ac.uk/pocm PhD Student @ ECS University of Southampton, UK _______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe

Paulo J. Matos
I'm interested in a freely available fast paced haskell tutorial. By fast paced, I means I want something that goes through basic in a very fast pace, presents a couple of examples and then talks about more advanced features. A set of tutorials would be also good. References to these kind of tutorials would be great.
You might like http://www.haskell.org/tutorial/ -- Edit this signature at http://www.digitas.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/ken/sig If monads encapsulate effects and lists form a monad, do lists correspond to some effect? Indeed they do, and the effect they correspond to is choice. Wadler 1995, Monads for fn'l programming
participants (3)
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Andrew Wagner
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Chung-chieh Shan
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Paulo J. Matos