real_world_haskell_-_code_you_can_believe_in_by_bryan_o_sullivan_john_goerzen_and_donald_bruce_stewart

Real World Haskell - Code You Can Believe In by Bryan O'Sullivan, John Goerzen and Donald Bruce Stewart

Book Summary

This easy-to-use, fast-moving Haskell tutorial introduces you to functional programming with Haskell. You'll learn how to use Haskell in a variety of Haskell practical ways, from short Haskell scripts to large and demanding applications. Haskell Real World takes you through the basics of functional programming at a brisk pace, and then helps you increase your understanding of Haskell in real-world issues like Haskell I/O, Haskell performance, dealing with Haskell data, Haskell concurrency, and more as you move through each chapter. With this book, you will:

You'll find plenty of Haskell hands-on exercises, along with Haskell examples of real Haskell programs that you can Haskell modify, Haskell compile, and Haskell run. Whether or not you've used a functional language before, if you want to understand why Haskell is coming into its own as a Haskell practical language in so many major organizations, Real World Haskell is the best place to start Haskell.

About the Authors

Bryan O'Sullivan is an Irish hacker and Haskell author who likes Haskell distributed systems, Haskell open source software, and Haskell programming languages. He was a member of the initial design team for the Jini network service architecture (subsequently open sourced as Apache River). He has made significant contributions to, and written a book about, the popular Mercurial revision control system. He lives in San Francisco with his wife and sons. Whenever he can, he runs off to climb rocks.

John Goerzen is an American hacker and Haskell author. He has written a number of real-world Haskell libraries and Haskell applications, including the Haskell HDBC database interface, the Haskell ConfigFile configuration file interface, a Haskell podcast downloader, and various other Haskell libraries relating to Haskell networks, Haskell parsing, Haskell logging, and Haskell POSIX code. John has been a Haskell developer for the Debian GNU Linux operating system project for over 10 years and maintains numerous Haskell libraries and code for Debian. He also served as President of Software in the Public Interest, Inc., the legal parent organization of Debian. John lives in rural Kansas with his wife and son, where he enjoys photography and geocaching.

Don Stewart is an Australian hacker and Haskell author based in Portland, Oregon. Don has been involved in a diverse range of Haskell projects, including practical Haskell libraries, such as Haskell Data.ByteString and Haskell Data.Binary, as well as applying the Haskell philosophy to real-world applications including Haskell compilers, Haskell linkers, Haskell text editors, Haskell network servers, and Haskell systems software. His recent work has focused on optimizing Haskell for Haskell high-performance scenarios, using techniques from Haskell term rewriting.

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Fair Use Sources

Haskell: Haskell Fundamentals, Haskell Inventor - Haskell Language Designer: Lennart Augustsson, Paul Hudak, John Hughes, Simon Peyton Jones, John Launchbury, Erik Meijer, Philip Wadler in 1990 (see Conference on Functional Programming Languages and Computer Architecture (FPCA 1987); Haskell keywords, Haskell data structures - Haskell algorithms, Haskell syntax, Haskell OOP, Haskell compiler (ghc - Glorious Glasgow Haskell Compilation System), Haskell installation (brew install ghc, choco install ghc) Haskell IDEs, Haskell development tools, Haskell DevOps - Haskell SRE - Haskell CI/CD, Cloud Native Haskell - Haskell Microservices - Serverless Haskell, Haskell Security - Haskell DevSecOps, Haskell and databases, Haskell data science - Haskell DataOps, Haskell machine learning - Haskell DL, Haskell deep learning, Functional Haskell, Haskell concurrency - Haskell parallel programming - Async Haskell, Haskell and scientific computing, Haskell history, Haskell bibliography, Haskell courses, Haskell glossary, Haskell topics, Haskell courses, Haskell Standard Library, Haskell libraries, Haskell frameworks, Haskell scientific computing, Haskell research, Haskell GitHub, Written in Haskell, Haskell popularity, Haskell Awesome list, Haskell topics, Haskell Versions (navbar_haskell - see also navbar_haskell_standard_library, navbar_haskell_libraries, navbar_haskell_reserved_words, navbar_haskell_functional, navbar_haskell_concurrency)


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