<
language> (Named after the logician
Haskell Curry) A
lazy purely functional language largely derived from
Miranda but with several extensions. Haskell was designed by a committee from the
functional programming community in April 1990. It features static
polymorphic typing,
higher-order functions, user-defined
algebraic data types, and
pattern-matching list comprehensions. Innovations include a
class system, systematic operator
overloading, a
functional I/O system, functional
arrays, and
separate compilation.
Haskell 1.3 added many new features, including
monadic I/O, standard libraries,
constructor classes,
labeled fields in datatypes,
strictness annotations, an improved
module system, and many changes to the Prelude.
Gofer is a cut-down version of Haskell with some extra features.
Filename extension: .hs, .lhs (
literate programming).
Home.
["Report on the Programming Language Haskell Version 1.1", Paul Hudak & P. Wadler eds, CS Depts, U Glasgow and Yale U., Aug 1991].
[Version 1.2: SIGPLAN Notices 27(5), Apr 1992].
Haskell 1.3 Report.
Mailing list:
haskell-request@cs.yale.edu.
Yale Haskell - Version 2.0.6, Haskell 1.2 built on
Common Lisp.
ftp://nebula.cs.yale.edu/pub/haskell/yale/.
Glasgow Haskell (GHC) - Version 2.04 for
DEC Alpha/
OSF2;
HPPA1.1/
HPUX9,10;
SPARC/
SunOs 4,
Solaris 2;
MIPS/
Irix 5,6;
Intel 80386/
Linux,
Solaris 2,
FreeBSD,
CygWin 32;
PowerPC/
AIX. GHC generates
C or
native code.
ftp://ftp.dcs.glasgow.ac.uk/pub/haskell/glasgow/.
E-mail:
glasgow-haskell-request@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk.
Haskell-B - Haskell 1.2 implemented in
LML, generates
native code.
ftp://ftp.cs.chalmers.se/pub/haskell/chalmers/.
E-mail:
hbc@cs.chalmers.se.
(1997-06-06)