> Given all these issues, I consider the only reasonable option is to
> discard the Prelude entirely. There will be no magic modules.
> Everything will be an ordinary library. HOFs like (.) are available
> from Control.Function. List ops come from Data.List. Any general
> abstractions can be added in abstract Sequence, Monad, etc. modules.
> Haskell will regain the kind of organic evolution whose lack
> currently causes Haskell to lose its lead over Python et al by the
> day.
I basically agree with a lot of the things you say. The only thing
is: it's so convenient to have the Prelude. I can just start writing
my haskell programs and don't have to worry about all kinds of
imports. And you'll end up being repetitive: you'll import (.) and
stuff like that in _every_ file. Yeah, this will definitely be more
modular, but if we go for it, it's going to be so much more (tedious)
work to create a new program.
-chris
_______________________________________________
Haskell-Cafe mailing list
Haskell-Cafe@...
http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe