Getting started with haskell
I wanted to share how I’ve finally settled on my haskell development environment and how I got it set up, since the process in the end wasn’t that trivial. Hopefully anyone else starting in haskell can avoid the annoyances and pitfalls that I ran into and get up and running (and doing haskell) quickly.
Getting haskell
First, download the haskell platform from haskell.org. This is pretty easy. At this point you should have ghc
(the compiler) and ghci
(the interactive REPL) installed and in your path.
Aslo at this point you should have cabal
installed. Cabal is haskells package manager. It’s like ruby gems, or .NET nuget, or node’s NPM (gah, so many!).
Get sublime text
As much of a visual studio fanboy that I am, I have to say that using sublimetext for haskell has turned out to be really nice. Most of the haskellers I asked on twitter also use sublime text so it has a very supportive and active community. If you have sublime text already, install the sublime haskell plugin via sublimes package manager.
SublimeHaskell leverages command line haskell tools, like hdevtools
and ghc-mod
to give you language completion, documentation, type inference (and type completion). I highly recommend these, since it makes development a lot easier.
On windows you may run into issues that you can’t install the unix-2.7
package. That’s OK. You don’t need to install it from cygwin, contrary to lots of stack overflow answers. Instead, go to the following fork of the hdevtools
project. Go to the project folder and do
\> cabal configure
\> cabal build
\> cabal install
Basically this just builds the project from source, then installs it into your cabal package path (which is for your user). Hdevtools gives access to type information for files on the command line, so it’s really important to get this working, otherwise your type inference in sublimetext won’t work.
Get sublime load file to REPL plugin
This plugin is really handy, it will auto load your module file into the REPL.
If you have problems…
I had some issues getting all this to work on windows. Cabal would fail trying to install certain packages giving gzip errors. If you run into that problem, chances are you have conflicting mingw/cygwin or gnu utils in your path. I suggest removing them and getting the official gnu32 utils (which solves this problem). More info can be found at this stack overflow question.
I also had issues where I had too many things in my path and the haskell installer (when adding itself to the path) pushed out some path items. Windows has a path length limit so if things get weird, just check that what you think should be there actually is.
Create a project
Creating a haskell project, for a novice, isn’t trivial. You need to initialize a project directory with cabal
, configure a bunch of crap in the project.cabal
file, and then re-configure cabal. If you want to have unit testing set up with auto-discoverable tests (like you can do in Java or C# with test attributes), you have to one step further and create a seperate test runner and add a bunch of magic haskell preprocessor tags. I can never remember how to do any of this and I find it endlessly frustrating every time I have to make a new project. Some IDE’s like EclipseFP automatically set all this up for you, but if you go the sublime route you’re on your own.
However, I took the time to write a grunt scaffolding task that will automatically create your cabalized project for you, AND set up your unit testing infrastructure so you don’t have to think about it. For those not familiar, grunt is a javascript build/automation tool that leverages node. I went with grunt to write the scaffolding since I wanted to try something new, and it looked easy (I’m a sucker for easy things).
Once you check out the project and put it in your grunt home directory, you can type grunt-init haskell-test
and it’ll prompt you for a project name, create a cabal file and project folders (with src and test directories), create a test runner, and create an initial unit testing file with a sample test in it. After that it’ll automatically run cabal configure --enable-tests
and you are good to go! To compile it type cabal build
and to run it type cabal test
(or sublime text will do this all for you since the sublime plugin works with cabal created projects).
Understanding the cabal file
A few things that got me when starting with haskell is understanding the cabal file. The cabal file is like a .proj
file for f# or c#, or your maven pom.xml
for Java. It describes dependencies, where the source directories are, etc. When you add dependencies to new libraries you’ll need to update this file.
Adding new tests
Unfortunately the grunt task I wrote only initializes the scaffold. It won’t set up boilerpate for new unit tests. However, at this point just copy the unit test file you have, update the unit test main (TestMain.hs
) to import the new unit test fixture module, and everything will be cool. Note, using HTF there are some conditions. Functions that are prefixed with test_
must be of type Assertion
, there needs to be a special preprocessor macro at the top of the file, quickcheck functions are prefixed with prop_
, etc. All of that is listed here, and everything is already set up with the grunt scaffold.
Conclusion
At this point you should be up and running with syntax highlighting, type inference, syntax completion, error highlighting, linting, unit testing, REPL, and debuggging (via the REPL). All things that you want from a full fledged programming experience. I’m not going to lie, visual studio is still an infinitely more pleasurable experience, BUT once the main project boilerplate was removed working in haskell is much more enjoyable.