u/james_haydon

▲ 28 r/haskell

I am happy to organise another Tokyo Haskell Meetup, on 19th of May (during, and quite close to, FM2026): 12Kanda building in Kanda (near Akihabara).

Two talks (in English):

The Missing Haskell DevTools
Luite Stegeman

>Haskell has a reputation for "if it compiles, it runs... but it probably still has a space leak." The tools for investigating the runtime behaviour of Haskell programs have always been spartan compared to what's available in environments like .NET, the JVM, or JavaScript.
>
>In this talk we'll look at how Haskell actually works under the hood, compiled code and bytecode,  and how this affects the tooling for debugging and profiling. We'll then see what the GHC developers have been doing recently to close the gap. Finally, we'll look at a new tool that brings several runtime-analysis capabilities together under one roof.

Hardware in Haskell with Clash
⁨Elliot Potts⁩

>In this talk, we explore how Haskell can be used to design digital circuits using the power of pure functions. Clash is a compiler that brings the rich language features you know and love such as polymorphism, ADTs and typeclasses to the world of FPGA or ASIC design. No prior digital design experience required!

Please use the Meetup link to RSVP if you are interested in attending (space is limited):

Tokyo Haskell Meetup

reddit.com
u/james_haydon — 16 days ago