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  2. Haskell Free Library and Opera House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haskell_Free_Library_and...

    The Haskell Free Library and Opera House (French: Bibliothèque et salle d'opéra Haskell) is a Victorian building that straddles the Canada–United States border, in Rock Island (now part of Stanstead), Quebec, and Derby Line, Vermont, respectively. The Opera House opened on June 7, 1904, having deliberately been built on the international ...

  3. QuickCheck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QuickCheck

    QuickCheck is a software library, a combinator library, originally written in the programming language Haskell, designed to assist in software testing by generating test cases for test suites – an approach known as property testing.

  4. Haskell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haskell

    The first revision, named Haskell 2010, was announced in November 2009 [2] and published in July 2010. Haskell 2010 is an incremental update to the language, mostly incorporating several well-used and uncontroversial features previously enabled via compiler-specific flags. Hierarchical module names.

  5. Haskell features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haskell_features

    Concurrent Haskell is an extension to Haskell that supports threads and synchronization. [7] GHC's implementation of Concurrent Haskell is based on multiplexing lightweight Haskell threads onto a few heavyweight operating system (OS) threads, [8] so that Concurrent Haskell programs run in parallel via symmetric multiprocessing. The runtime can ...

  6. Hugs (interpreter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugs_(interpreter)

    Hugs (Haskell User's Gofer System), also Hugs 98, is a bytecode interpreter for the functional programming language Haskell. Hugs is the successor to Gofer, and was originally derived from Gofer version 2.30b. [1] Hugs and Gofer were originally developed by Mark P. Jones, now a professor at Portland State University.

  7. Glasgow Haskell Compiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glasgow_Haskell_Compiler

    The Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC) is a native or machine code compiler for the functional programming language Haskell. [5] It provides a cross-platform software environment for writing and testing Haskell code and supports many extensions, libraries , and optimisations that streamline the process of generating and executing code.

  8. wxHaskell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WxHaskell

    wxHaskell is a portable and native graphical user interface (GUI) library for the programming language Haskell, built on wxWidgets. It is often used by those wanting to develop a graphical user interface (GUI) with a functional programming language. [1]

  9. Parsec (parser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsec_(parser)

    Parsec is a library for writing parsers written in the programming language Haskell. [3] It is based on higher-order parser combinators, so a complicated parser can be made out of many smaller ones. [4]