> By and large, "stack install" works :)
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Do you mean to suggest it doesn't? Maybe nix is better, but can nix be as easy as "brew install stack && stack setup && stack install" ? You are dissing stack but do you have anything better than that?
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I like to take excursions to analyse apologetics, such as preceding a claim with "by and large." That aside, no stack definitely does not work. It's bullshit. Of course I have something better than stack. WTF?
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In my experience, "by and large it works" is the best usable solution Haskell currently has. What do you have that is better than stack at allowing people to easily install Haskell software?
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Well, my team uses nix, but I would also never burden a student with that either. There are better solutions to stack in every context, but it's not the same solution in each of those contexts.
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Context: Haskell learner wants to write a small project that uses a few Haskell libraries from hackage. "Nix" is too much of a burden to learn simultaneously. "cabal install" fails cryptically. What should the learner do?
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Here's a thing. What do you think we were doing, students and teachers alike, before any of these existed? [cabal, nix, stack] Like, what were we doing? Tripping, falling and picking ourselves up? What?
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I'm not talking about students or other people coerced into using Haskell. And before stack, many of these did trip, fall, and just give up on Haskell.
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WTF. Oh my god dude. I hereby withdraw from this insane “debate”.
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Cheerio then.
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