• Report Links
    We do not store any files or images on our server. XenPaste only index and link to content provided by other non-affiliated sites. If your copyrighted material has been posted on XenPaste or if hyperlinks to your copyrighted material are returned through our search engine and you want this material removed, you must contact the owners of such sites where the files and images are stored.

Master Haskell From Scratch- A Basic To Advanced Course


🦊 DNSProxy Layer 7 DDOS Protection 🥷 / DMCA Ignored 🫡 / Advanced Browser Checks 🕸

King

Administrator
Joined
Jul 12, 2021
Messages
25,005
Reaction score
5
Points
38

dabd9d90bae1554f7de63f5fd95a4996.jpeg




Published 11/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 2.13 GB | Duration: 6h 10m

Get expertise of programming in Haskell​

What you'll learn
Haskell
Haskell vs Python
Haskell Modules
Zippers in Haskell
Monads and Functor in Haskell
Requirements
Basics of Programming
Basics of Functional Programming Language
Description
This course is about Haskell. Haskell is a strong, statically typed language with a very expressive type system. It also has non- strict evaluation, and it has a very unique approach to problem-solving. This course is going to emphasize using Haskell for practical problem-solving. This course consists of several topics, in three sections. In the first topic, we'll talk about problems that FP and Haskell can address. Then we'll talk about the functional programming-specific ways of approaching these problems. Then we'll talk about how Haskell specifically addresses these types of problems. Then we'll take a look at our first Haskell programs and start to begin an intuition for what they look like. And we'll dig deeper into some issues related to whitespace and layout. Then we'll use the Glasgow Haskell Compiler's read-evaluate-print loop, known as GHCi, to explore our Haskell programs' values and types and expressions. Then we'll learn to debug with GHCi. Moving on, we'll dig deeper, and we'll start to look at Haskell values and expressions, and specifically functions as values. We'll build an intuition for some of the core concepts. Then we'll look at types, polymorphism constraints, and how we can add type signatures to our values. And we're looking to sum up product types in Haskell's record syntax. At that point, we'll know enough to tackle type classes, and we'll learn how to make our own instances of existing type classes and how to build our own type classes. Finally, to cap it...

Read more

Continue reading...
 
Top