Haven't found a tutorial that puts it all together, but here's the dots I can connect:
- Nix to provision the Haskell - Your OS to provision Midi interpreter (is that the word for it?) - A build system with makefiles - The entry points for the program
So anyways, I could ensure that Nix and Haskell Stack work together so that I could use Nix and you could use Stack or plain Cabal. Maybe plain Cabal is the way to go.
The idea would be to use Haskell and Euterpea to create a project that generates music in some kind of style (to be determined) - in a way similar to how games that generate random levels do it.
You can because Python has functional features. if you have a question, especially about using Python functionally, just ask it, and we'll make recommendations as it makes sense.
@RakeshKumar ok, I'm going to try to put together a package we can work on together and you can fork it and send me pull requests and we can work on it together, what do you say?.
It's a general-purpose programming language. It's currently mostly used to write things such as compilers and web servers.
It has lots of interesting ideas from mathematics and theoretical computer science. Some folks use haskell to learn these ideas. They don't really care about 'developing' in it.