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Programming in Haskell - Info and Reading Options

Book's cover
The cover of “Programming in Haskell” - Open Library.

"Programming in Haskell" was published by Cambridge University Press in 2016 - enk, it has 304 pages and the language of the book is English.


“Programming in Haskell” Metadata:

  • Title: Programming in Haskell
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: 304
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: enk

“Programming in Haskell” Subjects and Themes:

Edition Specifications:

  • Pagination: xvi, 304 pages

Edition Identifiers:

AI-generated Review of “Programming in Haskell”:


"Programming in Haskell" Table Of Contents:

  • 1- Introduction
  • 2- First steps
  • 3- Types and classes
  • 4- Defining functions
  • 5- List comprehensions
  • 6- Recursive functions
  • 7- Higher-order functions
  • 8- Declaring types and classes
  • 9- The countdown problem
  • 10- Interactive programming
  • 11- Unbeatable tic-tac-toe
  • 12- Monads and more
  • 13- monadic parsing
  • 14- Foldables and friends
  • 15- Lazy evaluation
  • 16- Reasoning about programs
  • 17- Calculating compilers.

"Programming in Haskell" Description:

The Open Library:

"Haskell is a purely functional language that allows programmers to rapidly develop clear, concise, and correct software. The language has grown in popularity in recent years, both in teaching and in industry. This book is based on the author's experience of teaching Haskell for more than twenty years. All concepts are explained from first principles and no programming experience is required, making this book accessible to a broad spectrum of readers. While Part I focuses on basic concepts, Part II introduces the reader to more advanced topics. This new edition has been extensively updated and expanded to include recent and more advanced features of Haskell, new examples and exercises, selected solutions, and freely downloadable lecture slides and example code. The presentation is clean and simple, while also being fully compliant with the latest version of the language, including recent changes concerning applicative, monadic, foldable, and traversable types"--

Open Data:

Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Dedication -- Table of contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Part I Basic Concepts -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Functions -- 1.2 Functional programming -- 1.3 Features of Haskell -- 1.4 Historical background -- 1.5 A taste of Haskell -- 1.6 Chapter remarks -- 1.7 Exercises -- 2 First steps -- 2.1 Glasgow Haskell Compiler -- 2.2 Installing and starting -- 2.3 Standard prelude -- 2.4 Function application -- 2.5 Haskell scripts -- 2.6 Chapter remarks -- 2.7 Exercises -- 3 Types and classes -- 3.1 Basic concepts -- 3.2 Basic types -- 3.3 List types -- 3.4 Tuple types -- 3.5 Function types -- 3.6 Curried functions -- 3.7 Polymorphic types -- 3.8 Overloaded types -- 3.9 Basic classes -- 3.10 Chapter remarks -- 3.11 Exercises -- 4 Defining functions -- 4.1 New from old -- 4.2 Conditional expressions -- 4.3 Guarded equations -- 4.4 Pattern matching -- 4.5 Lambda expressions -- 4.6 Operator sections -- 4.7 Chapter remarks -- 4.8 Exercises -- 5 List comprehensions -- 5.1 Basic concepts -- 5.2 Guards -- 5.3 The zip function -- 5.4 String comprehensions -- 5.5 The Caesar cipher -- 5.6 Chapter remarks -- 5.7 Exercises -- 6 Recursive functions -- 6.1 Basic concepts -- 6.2 Recursion on lists -- 6.3 Multiple arguments -- 6.4 Multiple recursion -- 6.5 Mutual recursion -- 6.6 Advice on recursion -- 6.7 Chapter remarks -- 6.8 Exercises -- 7 Higher-order functions -- 7.1 Basic concepts -- 7.2 Processing lists -- 7.3 The foldr function -- 7.4 The foldl function -- 7.5 The composition operator -- 7.6 Binary string transmitter -- 7.7 Voting algorithms -- 7.8 Chapter remarks -- 7.9 Exercises -- 8 Declaring types and classes -- 8.1 Type declarations -- 8.2 Data declarations -- 8.3 Newtype declarations -- 8.4 Recursive types -- 8.5 Class and instance declarations -- 8.6 Tautology checker -- 8.7 Abstract machine

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