
Henning,
This link is broken for me...
On 4/3/07, Henning Thielemann
It was argued that people avoid Haskell because of terms from Category theory like 'Monad'. This problem can now be solved by a wrapper which presents all the WWW without monads! Start e.g. at http://saxophone.jpberlin.de/MonadTransformer?source=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Ehaskell%2Eorg%2Fhaskellwiki%2FCategory%3AMonad&language=English Of course the tool is written in Haskell, that is, Haskell helps solving problems which only exist because of Haskell. Bug reports and feature requests can be tracked at https://sourceforge.net/projects/parallelweb _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list Haskell@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell

Hallo,
On 4/3/07, Andrew Wagner
On 4/3/07, Henning Thielemann
wrote: It was argued that people avoid Haskell because of terms from Category theory like 'Monad'. This problem can now be solved by a wrapper which presents all the WWW without monads! Start e.g. at http://saxophone.jpberlin.de/MonadTransformer?source=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Ehaskell%2Eorg%2Fhaskellwiki%2FCategory%3AMonad&language=English Of course the tool is written in Haskell, that is, Haskell helps solving problems which only exist because of Haskell. Bug reports and feature requests can be tracked at https://sourceforge.net/projects/parallelweb
Hahaha, cool! "This tutorial aims to explain the concept of a warm, fuzzy thing and its application to functional programming in a way that is easy to understand and useful to beginning and intermediate Haskell programmers. Familiarity with the Haskell language is assumed, but no prior experience with warm, fuzzy things is required. The tutorial covers a lot of material and the later sections require a thorough understanding of the earlier material. Many code examples are provided along the way to demonstrate warm, fuzzy programming. It is not advisable to attempt to absorb all of the material in a single reading." -- -alex
participants (2)
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Alex Queiroz
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Andrew Wagner