[Haskell-beginners] Can i post code here for review and getting better?
Silent Leaf
silent.leaf0 at gmail.com
Thu Jun 22 23:58:52 UTC 2017
That book seems very interesting, tho all is dependent on how useful the
exercises are (otherwise i think i understand most of the *theory* of the
concepts in the book, but applying them to real tasks is the problem). I'll
look into it, thanks!
Stack exchange code review seems great too!
so, that's a yes for asking reviews of code around here too?
2017-06-23 0:40 GMT+02:00 Michael Litchard <michael at schmong.org>:
> I strongly suggest you acquire the book "Haskell from First Principles"
> and do each and every exercise, and not move forward until you understand
> the subject matter you are faced with. Do that and you will be well on the
> way to expertise.
>
> On Thu, Jun 22, 2017 at 3:38 PM, Michael Litchard <michael at schmong.org>
> wrote:
>
>> I have received much help over the years from the haskell community. This
>> is a good resource for your skill building. That said, consider also using
>> the code review section of stack exchange. They give internet points as
>> well. :)
>>
>> On Thu, Jun 22, 2017 at 1:21 PM, Silent Leaf <silent.leaf0 at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>> I'd like to know if this mailing list would be an appropriate place to
>>> post code and ask for review. The purpose would not be to help me do it,
>>> but to tell me how to do it better, more idiomatically, using more
>>> appropriate or powerful tools.
>>>
>>> If not, and even if yes, are there any other places where this might be
>>> appropriate? Are there haskell forums somewhere? mind you i just got the
>>> idea, so i'm gonna check, but maybe you all know which ones are better than
>>> others, or more active.
>>>
>>> Also, i've searched in vain for places where one could maybe get
>>> together into projects that would not require being fully fluent yet in
>>> haskell (with the will to learn and still some solid, yet relatively
>>> untested, bases), nor that would require getting updated on a projects of
>>> perhaps several thousands of more or less obscure code (for those that come
>>> from the outside *cough* operator maniacs *cough*).
>>>
>>> Otherwise, i'd also welcome ideas of very simple ideas of projects just
>>> to learn by doing. The idea would be to know how to do projects that
>>> actually do something, so usually there's some sort of contact with the
>>> exterior.
>>>
>>> Thanks verymuch in advance!
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Beginners mailing list
>>> Beginners at haskell.org
>>> http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/beginners
>>>
>>>
>>
>
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