Bryan O'Sullivan is an Irish hacker and writer who likes distributed systems, open source software, and 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.
Don Stewart is an Australian hacker, currently completing his computer science doctorate at the University of New South Wales, Sydney. Don has been involved in a diverse range of Haskell projects, including practical libraries such as Data.ByteString and Data.Binary, as well applying the Haskell philosophy to real world applications, including compilers, linkers, text editors, network servers and systems software. His recent work has focused on optimising Haskell for high-performance scenarios, using techniques from term rewriting. He is the current editor of the Haskell Weekly News.
John Goerzen is an American hacker and author. He has written a number of real-world Haskell libraries and applications, including the HDBC database interface, the ConfigFile configuration file interface, a podcast downloader, and various other libraries relating to networks, parsing, logging, and POSIX code. John has been a 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.
This easy-to-use, fast-moving tutorial introduces you to functional programming with Haskell. Learn how to use Haskell in a variety of practical ways, whether it's for short, script-like programs or large and demanding applications. Written for experienced programmers, Real World Haskell takes you through the basics of functional programming at a brisk pace, and helps you increase your understanding of Haskell in real-world issues like I/O, performance, dealing with data, concurrency, and more as you move through each chapter.
With this book, you will:
Understand the difference between procedural and functional programming
Learn about Haskell's compiler, interpreter, values, simple functions, and types
Find your way around Haskell's library -- and write your own
Use monads to express I/O operations and changes in state
Interact with databases, parse files and data, and handle errors
Discover how to use Haskell for systems programming
Learn concurrency and parallel programming with Haskell
You'll find plenty of hands-on exercises, along with examples of real Haskell programs that you can modify, compile, and run. If you've never used a functional language before, and want to understand why Haskell is now coming into its own as a practical language in so many major organizations, Real World Haskell is the place to start.
内容很全面,但是,Haskell的很多细节没有讲清楚。 作为第一本Haskell读物是不合适的。
評分一本实用主义的书。 相比较于其他从将语言特性的书来说,这本书从实用的角度详细讲解了Haskell的大部分方面。很适合软件工程师来看。 推荐。
評分其他的,还没看到更好的,这本书的作者Bryan还有另外一本力作关于Mecurial,我就不说哪本了,学过Mercurial都知道。哈哈
評分 評分一本实用主义的书。 相比较于其他从将语言特性的书来说,这本书从实用的角度详细讲解了Haskell的大部分方面。很适合软件工程师来看。 推荐。
有點老瞭,概念引入的太快瞭 真硬核 各種工程相關的內容平時真見不著 高級內容也不少
评分不是很好,既不 real world,好像也沒怎麼樣 haskell
评分不是很好,既不 real world,好像也沒怎麼樣 haskell
评分Haskell
评分太復雜,棄
本站所有內容均為互聯網搜索引擎提供的公開搜索信息,本站不存儲任何數據與內容,任何內容與數據均與本站無關,如有需要請聯繫相關搜索引擎包括但不限於百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2025 qciss.net All Rights Reserved. 小哈圖書下載中心 版权所有