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MDtox2018-04-24 00:37:09
Haskell
MDtox, 2018-04-24 00:37:09

Is there a good Haskell tutorial for beginners?

Recommend a good book for beginners. It is desirable that they start with Hello World, otherwise in those books that I read, they immediately begin to show complex examples.

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5 answer(s)
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Pavel Ivanov, 2018-04-24
@eastywest

There is an excellent free course - Functional Programming in Haskell

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xotkot, 2018-04-24
@xotkot

About Haskell in a human way

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Codebaker, 2018-04-24
@Codebaker

Have you missed this one ?!

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Sergey Kormishin, 2018-04-25
@coremission

In English Learn you Haskell for a great good. A very cool book.

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antares4045, 2019-06-25
@antares4045

It all depends very much on your initial level: Haskell is historically more of an esoteric language, which is visited either for the sake of interest or in search of enlightenment (whatever the furious Haskell fans tell you), therefore there is really not enough well-structured literature.

  • If you have some minimal experience and want to "just look", then you need "about Haskell in a human way"
    The material here is presented in the most digestible format in the entire RuNet, as for me, but the book is not even close to finished and concentrates more on adaptation of people who are very superficially familiar with programming in general;
  • When it comes to a Haskell textbook , "Learn Haskell for the sake of good" almost always pops up .
    They say that it is extremely simple and understandable, and that preschoolers can be taught from it. Personally, after reading a couple of chapters, I formed the opinion that a person "not in the subject" may have a large number of questions, but if you have a person at arm's length to whom you can ask them, then this is really perhaps the best option;
  • Periodically returning to hasel, every time I try to read the book of Alexandro Serano Mena , but times are no longer as carefree as in childhood, and there is no time to study multi-hundred-line Talmuds.
    The author focuses more on the principles of the language "under the hood", which is very cool for understanding the language, but the book itself clearly expects the reader to have many years of experience in programming in general and in the functional paradigm in particular, and without proper preparation it is better not to go there.

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