Haskell is very simple. Everything is composed of Functads which are themselves a Tormund of Gurmoids, usually defined over the Devons. All you have to do is stick one Devon inside a Tormund and it yields Reverse Functads (Actually Functoids) you use to generate Unbound Gurmoids.
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There’s this niggling worry that maybe I’m missing something important, but it doesn’t seem likely.
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I wish some smart person would do the work for me and say “yup, all nonsense” and then I wouldn’t have to think about it again.
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I'd be happy to answer questions but I'm still learning about it (...it may take me some time)
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Once you get past the lingo I find it eminently useful and even ergonomic to use, but yeah, documentation and explanations are all wonky
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It's really not useful trying to look at something like a wiki page for these concepts. You need sequential teaching material instead. (I personally recommend
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Wait this is real
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This works best in a study group but this is pretty much the best book on it right now. It's pretty slow, which is a good thing for Haskell. http://haskellbook.com
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I agree it fires up a lot of bullshit alerts when you first hear it :) But after the learning curve, it's (almost) all false positive alerts.
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