David:
"Yhc/Javascript is aimed to create a tool that generates Javascript out of a binary Yhc core file. The ability to convert an arbitrary Haskell source into Javascript makes it possible to execute Haskell programs in a Web browser."
The results appear to be more than a little on the chunkey side ...
... and while claiming to be XHTML aren't well-formed.
ats:
I think this is one of those dog-walking-on-its-hind-legs situations, in that Haskell is really pretty hard to compile, and getting it to go to Javascript at all is a neat trick...
(Incidentally, Yhc's mostly written by Tom Shackell, who did his CS degree at Kent at the same time as me, and Thomas "Bob" Davie who's a postgrad colleague of mine at Kent has worked on it too.)
David: "Yhc/Javascript is aimed to create a tool that generates Javascript out of a binary Yhc core file. The ability to convert an arbitrary Haskell source into Javascript makes it possible to execute Haskell programs in a Web browser."
The results appear to be more than a little on the chunkey side ...
... and while claiming to be XHTML aren't well-formed.
ats: I think this is one of those dog-walking-on-its-hind-legs situations, in that Haskell is really pretty hard to compile, and getting it to go to Javascript at all is a neat trick...
(Incidentally, Yhc's mostly written by Tom Shackell, who did his CS degree at Kent at the same time as me, and Thomas "Bob" Davie who's a postgrad colleague of mine at Kent has worked on it too.)