From HaskellWiki

Generic information

You can apply for an account and a project using the community server.

Once you have an account and/or a project, you upload a Darcs repository as follows. First, initialize your repository on the server:

$ ssh community.haskell.org you@haskell:~$ cd /srv/code/yourproject you@haskell:/srv/code/yourproject$ darcs init

Then, log out and push your repository:

$ darcs push community.haskell.org:/srv/code/yourproject

Demonstrations

The following demos where held:

* Jutaro, Leksah: the Haskell IDE * Don Stewart, vacuum + adaptive data structures * Tupil.com / chr1s: Real World Web Apps in Haskell * Thorkil Naur, interactive, time-sliced HPC code coverage * David Himmelstrup, the LHC Haskell Compiler.

Projects

If you have a project that you want to work on at the Hackathon, please describe it here.

Since Hackathons are great for teamwork, consider joining one of the projects mentioned below. If you're interested in one of these projects, add your name to the list of hackers under that project.

Haskell Platform 1.0

Finish the construction and roll out of the new Haskell Platform

Hackers

dcoutts

dons

Chris Eidhof (chr1s)

kolmodin

Platform specified, generic unix tarball installer.

Gentoo Linux

Package the haskell platform and put into portage.

Progress: All libraries and applications are in portage. GHC-6.10.2, haddock-2.4.2 and parallel-1.1.0.1 are still masked for testing, other packages are usable with older ghc versions.

kolmodin

Darcs Sprint #2

Description

The second Darcs Sprint. Help improve our beloved DVCS! Add your nick to the list.

Hackers

Reinier Lamers (tux_rocker)

Eric Kow (kowey)

Ben Moseley (benmos)

Ganesh Sittampalam (Heffalump)

Ian Lynagh (igloo)

Arjan Boeijink (arjanb)

Benedikt Schmidt (beschmi)

Petr Ročkai (mornfall)

Thorkil Naur (thorkilnaur)

Grapefruit

Description

Grapefruit is a library for Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) with a focus on user interfaces. FRP makes it possible to implement reactive and interactive systems in a declarative style. With Grapefruit, user interfaces are described as networks of communicating widgets and windows. Communication is done via different kinds of signals which describe temporal behavior.

Possible subprojects

graphics support Jeff Heard expressed interest in adapting Hieroglyph to work with Grapefruit. The classic version of Grapefruit contains quite a bit of OpenGL-based 3D animation stuff which could be ported to the current Grapefruit version. We should also take a look at RSAGL.

improvements of the UI part and the GTK+-based UI backend

Qt-based UI backend HQK should be used for this.

addition or integration of some kind of physics engine There is, for example, Hpysics from Roman Cheplyaka (Feuerbach)



Licensing

Grapefruit is BSD3-licensed, so all contributions to Grapefruit should be BSD3-licensed, too. If you don’t like this, please discuss this on the Grapefruit mailing list or contact Wolfgang Jeltsch.

Hackers

Wolfgang Jeltsch (jeltsch)

Fraser Wilson

Roman Cheplyaka (Feuerbach)

Peter Verswyvelen

Thomas Davie

There is a doodle for planning who is doing what.

Leksah

Description

leksah is an attempt to develop a Haskell IDE in Haskell. Help adding cool features to this Wannabee IDE, like:

Generate export list

Code Formatter

Infer types

...

Hackers

Jürgen Nicklisch (jutaro)





Scion

Description

Scion is a library that aims to provide IDE-like functionality on top of the GHC API. It aims to be front-end agnostic, thus serve as a common middle-layer for various Haskell programming frontends like Emacs, Vim, Yi, Eclipse, etc.

It currently only provides rudimentary functionality, such as loading a project and single-threaded background-typechecking. Currently, Scion's only frontend is Emacs, but a Vim frontend is in the underway. Possible Hackathon projects could be:

* Extend Scion's capabilities. For example: cross-refs, jump to source, more type information, show haddock comments

* Add another Scion frontend. E.g., hook up Yi or Eclipse with scion

Update (Sun Dec 13 22:20:03 CET 2009): Vim is supported and scion is that useful that you shouldn't miss it. There are still some features lacking which Eclipse etc provide. You should definitely give it a try!

Hackers

* Thomas Schilling (nominolo) * David Waern (waern)

Type class aliases

Description

Type class aliases is a much wanted extension to Haskell proposed long ago by John Meacham (John's website, mailing list) that has never been implemented yet. It is time this extension sees the light of day!

GHC will be the target compiler. Perhaps GHC plugins (GHC wiki, The Monad Reader 12) are of help here?

Please have a look at the context alias wiki page and extend it if you can.

Ideas

from Martijn van Steenbergen

As a starting point we'll focus on supporting the following syntax:

class alias FooBar a = (Foo a, Bar a) x :: FooBar a => a x = ...

from Wolfgang Jeltsch

A “class alias” actually doesn’t stand for a class but for a context (or a part of a context). So it might be better to choose a slightly different syntax:

context Foobar a = (Foo a, Bar a)

John Meacham proposes the following syntax for class aliases (context aliases) with superclass constraints:

class alias Num a = Eq a => (Additive a, Multiplicative a)

This is not consistent with the superclass syntax of class declarations. I think, we should use this syntax:

class alias Eq a => Num a = (Additive a, Multiplicative a)

Or better:

context Eq a => Num a = (Additive a, Multiplicative a)

Hackers

Goals in GHC(i)

Description

We will attempt to extend GHC(i) to give the type (and possibly context) of all 'undefined's in your code, similar to goals in Agda.

Hackers

Sebastiaan Visser

Tom Lokhorst

Erik Hesselink

Rui Barbosa

Progress

We have a working prototype, and integration in GHCi. Code is available on GitHub [1], hackage package will follow soon.

Containers: beyond Data.Map

Scalable, adaptive persistent container types (Data.Map, Data.IntMap),

Don Stewart

Christophe Poucet

Nicolas Pouillard

Summary of approach here: http://cpoucet.wordpress.com/2009/04/18/flattening-datamap/

xmonad

Some new extensions and developers.

Don Stewart

Nicolas Pouillard.

Building a FastCGI interface for Happstack

We've built a way to run Happstack applications on FastCGI, version 0.1.1 is now on hackage: happstack-fastcgi

Accompanying blogpost: http://blog.tupil.com/running-happstack-applications-with-fastcgi/

Eelco Lempsink

Chris Eidhof

Yi

Speed improvements and perhaps Scion integration.

David Waern

Scion integration: Figured out a design for where store and call callbacks for initializing and closing Scion. Next step is to figure out how to avoid circular module dependencies.

David Himmelstrup (Lemmih)

Complexity

I released version 0.1.1 of complexity, a small package to determine the algorithmic complexity of a function.

Roel van Dijk

Numerals

We released version 0.1 of numerals, a package which does various things with numerals for a number of natural languages and numerical systems.

For instance:

> ( cardinal enShort Masculine 42 ) :: Maybe String Just "forty-two"

Bas van Dijk

Roel van Dijk

DocTest

Integrating DocTest with Haddock

Simon Hengel

David Waern and I discussed how we could integrate DocTest with Haddock.

Experiences

Please list projects with which you are familiar. This way, people know whom to contact for more information or guidance on a particular project.