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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If they were going to give up that easily, maybe programming isnt for them?
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Replying to @jonoabroad @dibblego and
who said it was easily? Haskell isn't purely for pedagogy. People want to be productive with it. If it takes hours and hours to install existing libraries, every reasonable developer will understand haskellers just don't value productivity and use something else.
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I dont want it for teaching, the analogue of tripping up and the giving up suggests it wasnt a large issue.
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Replying to @jonoabroad @dibblego and
People struggling to install existing software for hours on end until they're totally frustrated with Haskell is not a large issue?
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Replying to @EyalL @jonoabroad and
Of course it is an issue. So why fuck with them even more?
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Replying to @dibblego @jonoabroad and
Your claim here is completely without evidence and completely contrary to the experience of me and every Haskeller I worked with.
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I so so so so so so so so so wish you could see the hypocrisy in this sentence that you just wrote. Until then, I doubt this issue can be accurately debated.
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