[Haskell-beginners] Need some advices about university

Noah Diewald noah at diewald.me
Fri Oct 28 07:45:10 CEST 2011


On 10/27/2011 09:31 PM, Rustom Mody wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 28, 2011 at 1:19 AM, Noah Diewald <noah at diewald.me
> <mailto:noah at diewald.me>> wrote:
> 
>     It would be nice to know of a school somewhere in the US or Canada where
>     CS courses aren't taught mostly in Java. Is there such a place?
> 
>     I would love to find a school with strengths in FP and linguistics.
> 
> 
> It seems you want to search for an intersection of linguistics + FP.
> There is nltk http://www.nltk.org/.  Its in python -- hopefully better
> than java though not haskell.

Thanks. I appreciate the help. I was aware of nltk. I know about GF,
too. I guess functional programming is the important bit for me. It
bothers me that all schools seem to be Java schools in the US but I
guess I do actually want something more specific than anything but Java.
Java is just the bad guy since it seems to be the only option so often.
I kind of regret going on about it so much in my last email. It is
better to focus on the positives.

I like linguistics and I like functional programming. Something like
this is right up my alley:

Computational Semantics with Functional Programming by Jan van Eijck and
Christina Unger.
http://homepages.cwi.nl/~jve/cs/

I really like the idea of eventually being able to model natural
language grammars using Haskell but for theoretical and descriptive work
not just to process it. I hear that there are HPSG researchers in the US
using systems written in Lisp, which sounds cool but is pretty rare and
hard to find. I guess my dream school would have a good theoretical
linguistics department and a good CS department with a big functional
programming focus. I still need to learn a lot about CS, not just
particular techniques that relate to language. Where I am applying now
has a great linguistics department and a great CS department but I know
that the courses I take in CS will be Java courses. It isn't really what
I want but I've accepted that I'll just have to learn what I can on my
own, which isn't so bad but having teachers and fellow students with
similar interests around would be a lot nicer.

And, I thank you for your help but I really am mostly curious about US
universities with lots of FP goodies more than any particular software.
My question is the same as the person who started this thread's. Where
do you go in the US if you love functional programming and particularly
Haskell? I would love some advice about universities. Google really
doesn't know everything.

-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: signature.asc
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 490 bytes
Desc: OpenPGP digital signature
URL: <http://www.haskell.org/pipermail/beginners/attachments/20111028/0684c2c4/attachment.pgp>


More information about the Beginners mailing list