Difference between revisions of "Pronunciation"

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| <hask> : </hask>
 
| <hask> : </hask>
 
| cons
 
| cons
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|-
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| <hask> [] </hask>
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| nil
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|-
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| <hask> () </hask>
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| unit
 
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Revision as of 20:48, 8 January 2008

Some notes for beginners on how to pronounce those strange Haskell operators etc.

This is just a rough start to this page. Obviously needs more work.

This can be a table with formal and informal ways of saying various operators and code snippets such as

Symbol Pronounciation
-> maps to, to
-<
= is
== equals
=> is a witness for, implies
. dot (could be used anywhere, but especially in, for example, Data.Char.ord), ring, compose (for example, negate . (+1)), (silent) (for example, forall a. (Num a) => a)
<- drawn from, from
++ append
>>= bind
>> then
\ lambda
: cons
[] nil
() unit
Example Pronounciation
f :: Int -> Int f has type Int to Int

should we add informal, possibly bad suggestions like "then", "is", "gets"?