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20:40
Hello folks.
I'd recommend the Haskell Book haskellbook.com as a reference, though it is very long and daunting. Also less free than LYAH. Still a good resource.
One issue I've seen with language learners is in going from learning the syntactic constructs or even the best practices of a language, to learning how to actually "use" it; i.e. the tooling for project/dependency management, testing, etc. Haskell Book covers that pretty well.
Going from LYAH to Haskell Book seems a pretty sound strategy.
21:06
@EricFulmer LYAH was nice until I reached chapter 11 with functors and so on and then I got stuck and didn't understand anything anymore.
21:58
@Rizier123 functors and monads take some time to wrap your head around. I find repetition very helpful.
@Code-Apprentice I feel like I just have to use them and see the use of it to fully understand how they work.
 
1 hour later…
23:17
@EricFulmer There's a meetup here in NYC that's using that book as a study guide. But they're really too serious about doing the homework... so much so that I stopped going. (plus they don't have any beverages or food - kinda important in a meetup to me.)
@Rizier123 yes, using them definitely helps with the learning. One reason I find monads so difficult is the extra level of abstraction. Functors have not been terribly difficult for me.
How about this tutorial? haskell.org/tutorial/index.html
> Our general strategy for introducing language features is this: motivate the idea, define some terms, give some examples, and then point to the Report for details. We suggest, however, that the reader completely ignore the details until the Gentle Introduction has been completely read.
> On the other hand, Haskell's Standard Prelude (in Appendix A of the Report and the standard libraries (found in the Library Report [5]) contain lots of useful examples of Haskell code; we encourage a thorough reading once this tutorial is completed. This will not only give the reader a feel for what real Haskell code looks like, but will also familiarize her with Haskell's standard set of predefined functions and types.

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