Difference between revisions of "PropLang"

From HaskellWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Categorize)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
  +
[[Category:User interfaces]] [[Category:Proposals]] [[Category:Libraries]]
 
A design for a GUI library which is more like Haskell and less like C. To be written over Gtk2Hs.
 
A design for a GUI library which is more like Haskell and less like C. To be written over Gtk2Hs.
   
Line 5: Line 6:
 
== Thoughts by ==
 
== Thoughts by ==
   
Neil Mitchell, Duncan Coutts
+
Neil Mitchell, some patches from Joachim Breitner, discussions and help from Duncan Coutts
 
   
 
For a darcs repo see: http://www.cs.york.ac.uk/fp/darcs/proplang/
 
For a darcs repo see: http://www.cs.york.ac.uk/fp/darcs/proplang/
Line 35: Line 35:
 
There are bindings which relate variables.
 
There are bindings which relate variables.
   
<haskell>
 
 
-- the window text is the variable
 
-- the window text is the variable
 
window!text =<= variable
 
window!text =<= variable
Line 42: Line 41:
 
-- combine the two texts to create the window text
 
-- combine the two texts to create the window text
 
window!text =< with2 variable1 variable2 (++)
 
window!text =< with2 variable1 variable2 (++)
</haskell>
 
   
 
If any of the values on the RHS of a binding change, then the LHS is updated.
 
If any of the values on the RHS of a binding change, then the LHS is updated.

Latest revision as of 21:21, 23 June 2007

A design for a GUI library which is more like Haskell and less like C. To be written over Gtk2Hs.

Link: http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~chak/haskell/ports/

Thoughts by

Neil Mitchell, some patches from Joachim Breitner, discussions and help from Duncan Coutts

For a darcs repo see: http://www.cs.york.ac.uk/fp/darcs/proplang/

In particular check out Sample.hs, I am particularly proud of the word count:

sb!text =< with1 (txt!text) (\x ->
    "Word count: " ++ show (length $ words x))

Overview

There are events, you can register to be notified when an event fires by doing

event += handler

There are variables, which have events which fire, and a value which you can set and get.

variable <- newVar "value"
variable += handler
variable -< "value"
x <- getVal variable

There are objects, objects have properties. A property is just a variable.

window!text += handler
window!text -< "Titlebar text"

There are bindings which relate variables.

-- the window text is the variable
window!text =<= variable
-- the window text is the variable, but upppercase
window!text =< with1 variable (map toUpper)
-- combine the two texts to create the window text
window!text =< with2 variable1 variable2 (++)

If any of the values on the RHS of a binding change, then the LHS is updated.