[Haskell] ANNOUNCE: Introducing Sifflet, visual functional programming language

Introducing Sifflet -- version 0.1.5, first public release! Sifflet is a visual, functional programming language. Sifflet programmers define functions by drawing diagrams. Sifflet shows how a function call is evaluated on the diagram. It is intended as an aid for learning about recursion. * A picture explains Sifflet better than words: please see the screenshot showing how to evaluate 3!: http://mypage.iu.edu/~gdweber/software/sifflet/home.html * Features: - Visual editor. - Visual tracer/debugger which shows how function calls are evaluated -- including recursive calls, of course. -- This is an active learning process: Sifflet doesn't overwhelm students with a huge trace of function calls; it provides only as much expansion as the student requests. - Extensive tutorial with 6,348 words and 31 pictures -- so hey, it's worth 37,348 words! (but not 37,348! words) - Number, string, and list data types. - Palette with a small number of primitive functions. - Runnable examples of compound functions. * Download: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/sifflet * Home page: http://mypage.iu.edu/~gdweber/software/sifflet/home.html * Tutorial: http://mypage.iu.edu/~gdweber/software/sifflet/doc/tutorial.html -- ___ ___ __ _ / _ \ / _ \| | | | Gregory D. Weber, Associate Professor / /_\// / | | | /\ | | Indiana University East / /_\\/ /__| | |/ \| | http://mypage.iu.edu/~gdweber/ \____/\_____/\___/\__/ Tel. (765) 973-8420; FAX (765) 973-8550