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From: Chaddaï Fouché
I looked, I didn't find anything interesting.
Well maybe you should look one more time with your brain on... Your claim that :
Last I heard, Maple is simply another fast number-chrunking engine.
Show that you never even bothered to read the feature list of the software ! http://www.maplesoft.com/products/Maple11/academic/index.aspx?D=3040 I tried both Mathematica and Maple and while I'll be the first to admit the Mathematica interface was more attractive, it's the only obvious point I concede to it (and my version of Maple was quite old so this might not even be true anymore). As others who knows the subject have said, Mathematica and Maple are quite close and outperforms each other regularly in their fields of excellence. -- Jedaï

On 6/1/07, Chaddaï Fouché
2007/6/1, Andrew Coppin
: I looked, I didn't find anything interesting.
Well maybe you should look one more time with your brain on...
Even my years old TI-89 calculator with a paltry Z80 processor and a few hundred K of RAM does symbolic algebra, including symbolically solving differential equations. Now if only I could run Haskell on a handheld that small.

I seem to recall that Aarne Ranta ran Hugs on a (Sharp) Zaurus PDA at one of the ICFPs a few years back. Aha, here in fact is a picture of his GF (Grammatical Framework), written in Haskell, running on a Zaurus: http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne/GF1/doc/zaurus2.jpg There seem to be more details available through his web page (a site- specific Google search for "zaurus" would seem appropriate). A broader Google search for "Haskell Zaurus" returns (for me) upwards of 1/2 a million hits, the first page of which look promising (although I can't believe all of them are!). I don't own a Zaurus (or any PDA) myself, although I must say I'm tempted now. So let me know if you find anything definitive. -- Fritz On Fri 1 Jun 07, at 6:33 pm, Dan Piponi wrote:
On 6/1/07, Chaddaï Fouché
wrote: 2007/6/1, Andrew Coppin
: I looked, I didn't find anything interesting.
Well maybe you should look one more time with your brain on...
Even my years old TI-89 calculator with a paltry Z80 processor and a few hundred K of RAM does symbolic algebra, including symbolically solving differential equations. Now if only I could run Haskell on a handheld that small. _______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe

Hi
I seem to recall that Aarne Ranta ran Hugs on a (Sharp) Zaurus PDA at one of the ICFPs a few years back. Aha, here in fact is a picture of his GF (Grammatical Framework), written in Haskell, running on a Zaurus:
http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne/GF1/doc/zaurus2.jpg
There seem to be more details available through his web page (a site- specific Google search for "zaurus" would seem appropriate).
http://haskell.org/communities/05-2007/html/report.html#handheld A port of Yhc to a handheld was apparently done - it shouldn't be that hard. Thanks Neil

On Sat, 2 Jun 2007, Fritz Ruehr wrote:
I seem to recall that Aarne Ranta ran Hugs on a (Sharp) Zaurus PDA at one of the ICFPs a few years back. Aha, here in fact is a picture of his GF (Grammatical Framework), written in Haskell, running on a Zaurus:
I've got Hugs and GHC both running under a debian image on my Zaurus (a C3200), for what it's worth. GHC's painfully slow though, sometime I should get round to cooperating some with everyone else looking at doing a registerised build on ARM to try producing a registerised GHC that runs natively on Sharp-derived ROMs. Not that that necessarily means I'll do it! -- flippa@flippac.org Ivanova is always right. I will listen to Ivanova. I will not ignore Ivanova's recomendations. Ivanova is God. And, if this ever happens again, Ivanova will personally rip your lungs out!
participants (5)
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Chaddaï Fouché
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Dan Piponi
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Fritz Ruehr
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Neil Mitchell
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Philippa Cowderoy