[Haskell-beginners] ANN: MOOC course on Functional Programming

Michael Peternell michael.peternell at gmx.at
Sun May 19 21:37:13 CEST 2013


The topic seems interesting to me!

But I would also like to know a bit more about the mundane facts of this course...

When will it be?
Where will it be?
How many people can be in the course?
What type of course is it?
How many votes are "enough" votes?
Why do you care about votes anyways?
Will it be free or how much will it cost?

-Michael

Am 19.05.2013 um 21:29 schrieb mukesh tiwari <mukeshtiwari.iiitm at gmail.com>:

> 
> I think it will be offered if it gets enough votes. 
> 
> We are offering the Haskell/FP related course:
> https://moocfellowship.org/submissions/the-dance-of-functional-programming-languaging-with-haskell-and-python
> which goes online if it gathers enough votes.
> 
> -Mukesh
> 
> 
> On Mon, May 20, 2013 at 12:52 AM, 7stud <7stud at excite.com> wrote:
> I don't get it.  Is that a class being offered online?  Is it free?  When is it offered?
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "Rustom Mody" [rustompmody at gmail.com]
> Date: 05/19/2013 12:37 PM
> To: "beginners" <beginners at haskell.org>
> Subject: [Haskell-beginners] ANN: MOOC course on Functional Programming
> 
> We are offering the Haskell/FP related course:
> https://moocfellowship.org/submissions/the-dance-of-functional-programming-languaging-with-haskell-and-python
> which goes online if it gathers enough votes.
> 
> It  is our contribution towards getting Haskell and FP up on MOOC (Massive Open Online Course).
> 
> The aim is:
> 1. To use Haskell as medium to understand and showcase functional programming
> 2. To show how using Haskell as a thinking language can change the quality of programming in more conventional coding languages -- eg python.
> 
> It  has been designed in the spirit of using haskell to play with ideas,  and then idiomatically refine them for any implementation contexts  including Haskell.
> Therefore, in this course (classical) typeful functional programming  will take precedence over (modern) type hackery. Some aspects of this  shift of emphasis is [3].
> Also some paradigm/philosophy questions, eg why much-hyped paradigms like OOP are not such a good idea [4]
> 
> Functional Programming has never had it so good as today!
> Books like RWH, implementations like ghc, and of course the Haskell language itself are all part of this Never Before.
> 
> spj has often joked about avoiding success at all costs.  This may be somewhat tongue-in-cheek yet is also serious.
> As Haskell enters the mainstream and  begins to compete head-on-head with C, C++, Java, Python etc, we need to separate out these aspects:
> 
> 1. Mastering Haskell is harder today than when FP was an academic passtime
> 2. Haskell-the-technology is obscuring the possibilities and reach of Haskell-for-CS
> 3. The elegant computer science (FP) + powerful  modern technology (ghc) is obscuring the questions of paradigm and  perspective that marked the inception of the field in an earlier era [1]
> 
> One  of the main intentions behind this course is to take cognizance of  these facts and work on the Haskell-learning-curve to make it accessible  to people with a wide swathe of interests/backgrounds.
> 
> So…
> Those who are called to the above, Please Vote!
> And those who are not called, also please vote [After all the choice is between this Haskell/FP course and none <wink> ]
> 
> Rusi
> -----------------------------
> [1] Think of AI →  Lisp, Denotational Semantics → ML, Notation as a tool for thought → APL etc
> [2] https://moocfellowship.org/submissions/the-dance-of-functional-programming-languaging-with-haskell-and-python
> [3] A shopping-list of topics in classic FP : http://blog.languager.org/2012/10/functional-programming-lost-booty.html
>      Recursion as a wider concept than just recursive functions http://blog.languager.org/2012/05/recursion-pervasive-in-cs.html
> [4] Folly of OOP http://blog.languager.org/2012/07/we-dont-need-no-ooooo-orientation-4.html
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Beginners mailing list
> Beginners at haskell.org
> http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Beginners mailing list
> Beginners at haskell.org
> http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners




More information about the Beginners mailing list