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by sbergot
4151 days ago
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It is a bit easy to dismiss everything haskell related as only useful for "academic research". In fact I am not sure how do you make this link between this post and research at all. Now if you don't know about haskell and want to write a quick and short lived script, there is 0 value in writing it in haskell. However, if you happen to now a bit of haskell and that your script is likely to be used several times you might find some benefits to this. - haskell is quick to write and the code can be quite terse. You can create an myscript.hs file and run it with runhaskell. Zero platform complexity overhead. - you get the benefits of static types which are easier maintenance and refactoring. - if it evolves in anything more complex, it is easy to move it in a cabal project. - if you need to do something cpu intensive, you can compile/profile/improve perfs. |
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