[Haskell-beginners] (re-re-send) (fwd) Haskell Quick Reference (1-page PDF) - QuickReference.pdf (0/1) - QuickReference.pdf (0/1)

Benjamin L.Russell DekuDekuplex at Yahoo.com
Fri Nov 7 02:23:23 EST 2008


Apparently, I had mis-specified the content type for PDF as "pdf",
rather than "application/pdf," as specified in a listing of MIME types
(see "Webmaster Toolkit :: listing of mime types" at
http://www.webmaster-toolkit.com/mime-types.shtml).

My apologies; this is a re-re-send, to ensure that future PDF
attachments will also get through.

-- Benjamin L. Russell

On Fri, 07 Nov 2008 16:15:29 +0900, Benjamin L.Russell
<DekuDekuplex at Yahoo.com> wrote:

>The PDF attachment to the following forwarded message was mistakenly
>content-filtered away, so I have modified the filtering options to
>include PDF files.
>
>This is a retransmission, with the PDF file reattached; if this
>attempt fails, I shall need to do some research on specifying
>filtering options for content types in Mailman before attempting yet
>another retransmission.
>
>-- Benjamin L. Russell
>
>On Fri, 07 Nov 2008 15:40:25 +0900, Benjamin L.Russell
><DekuDekuplex at Yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>>The following one-page Haskell Quick Reference was posted earlier
>>today on Haskell-Cafe; I am forwarding it to this list as a reference
>>for any interested beginners.
>>
>>-- Benjamin L. Russell
>>
>>On Thu, 6 Nov 2008 13:41:13 +0000, in gmane.comp.lang.haskell.cafe
>>Malcolm Wallace <Malcolm.Wallace at cs.york.ac.uk> wrote:
>>
>>>Some time ago, there was a thread about a "CheatSheet" for Haskell
>>>beginners.  As I recall, the CheatSheet was more than 12 pages long.
>>>
>>>For a Haskell tutorial I was running at a conference recently, I needed
>>>a "Quick Reference Guide" that would fit onto a single side of A4.  So I
>>>knocked one together quickly, and it is attached as a PDF.  I send it to
>>>this list, with permission for anyone to distribute it more widely as
>>>they wish, in the hope that it might be useful.
>>>
>>>Doubtless it is incomplete, and I have no particular desire to fix
>>>errors or maintain this document, so if anyone is interested and would
>>>like to adopt it, I can pass on the editable sources.  It was originally
>>>created as an Apple Numbers spreadsheet (simply for speed of creation)
>>>but could be converted to Excel or CSV, for import into other tools.
>>>
>>>Regards,
>>>    Malcolm



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