Showing 124 open source projects for "open-shell"

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  • 1
    Beam

    Beam

    A type-safe, non-TH Haskell SQL library and ORM

    Beam is a Haskell interface to relational databases. Beam uses the Haskell type system to verify that queries are type-safe before sending them to the database server. Queries are written in a straightforward, natural monadic syntax. Combinators are provided for all standard SQL92 features, and a significant subset of SQL99, SQL2003, and SQL2008 features. Beam is standards-compliant but not naive. We recognize that different database backends provide different guarantees, syntaxes, and...
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 2
    Unison

    Unison

    A friendly programming language from the future

    Unison is an open source functional programming language based on a simple idea with big implications: code is content-addressed and immutable. Unison’s core idea is that code is immutable and identified by its content. This lets us reimagine many aspects of how a programming language works. We simplify codebase management, Unison has no builds, no dependency conflicts, and renaming things is trivial.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 3
    elm-format

    elm-format

    elm-format formats Elm source code

    elm-format formats Elm source code according to a standard set of rules based on the official Elm Style Guide. It makes code easier to write, because you never have to worry about minor formatting concerns while powering out new code. It makes code easier to read, because there are no longer distracting minor stylistic differences between different code bases. As such, your brain can map more efficiently from source to mental model. It makes code easier to maintain because you can no longer...
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 4
    Tidal

    Tidal

    Pattern language

    ...This allows you to quickly create complex patterns from simple ingredients. By default, sound is made with the featureful SuperDirt synth/sampler, but you can control other synths using Open Sound Control (OSC) or MIDI. Whether you're using SuperDirt or a synth, every filter and effect can be manipulated independently with Tidal patterns. Tidal is embedded in the Haskell language, although you don't have to learn Haskell to learn Tidal. You can learn Tidal through experimentation and play, most Tidal coders have little or no experience in software engineering.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 5
    directory

    directory

    Platform-independent library for basic file system operations

    Documentation can be found on Hackage. Changes between versions are recorded in the change log. When building this package directly from the Git repository, one must run autoreconf -fi to generate the configure script needed by cabal configure. This requires Autoconf to be installed.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 6
    Web3 API for Haskell

    Web3 API for Haskell

    Web3 API for Haskell

    This library implements Haskell API client for popular Web3 platforms.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 7
    Cabal

    Cabal

    Upstream development repository for Cabal and cabal-install

    Cabal is a system for building and packaging Haskell libraries and programs. It defines a common interface for package authors and distributors to easily build their applications in a portable way. Cabal is part of a larger infrastructure for distributing, organizing, and cataloging Haskell libraries and programs. The term cabal can refer to either: cabal-the-spec (.cabal files), cabal-the-library (code that understands .cabal files), or cabal-the-tool (the cabal-install package which...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 8
    Brick

    Brick

    A declarative Unix terminal UI library written in Haskell

    Brick is a Haskell terminal user interface (TUI) programming toolkit that enables developers to build rich, responsive terminal applications via a declarative model: you define a pure function that renders the UI from application state and supply state transition logic to handle events. brick exposes a declarative API. Unlike most GUI toolkits which require you to write a long and tedious sequence of widget creations and layout setup, brick just requires you to describe your interface using...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 9
    optparse-applicative

    optparse-applicative

    Applicative option parser

    optparse-applicative is a haskell library for parsing options on the command line, and providing a powerful applicative interface for composing them. optparse-applicative takes care of reading and validating the arguments passed to the command line, handling and reporting errors, generating a usage line, a comprehensive help screen, and enabling context-sensitive bash, zsh, and fish completions. A value of type Parser a represents a specification for a set of options, which will yield a...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 10
    Gitit

    Gitit

    A wiki using HAppS, pandoc, and git

    Gitit is a wiki application written in Haskell that uses Happstack for serving and Pandoc for markup conversion. Wiki content and attachments are stored in Git, Darcs, or Mercurial repositories, allowing versioning via VCS or web editing. To run gitit, you'll need git in your system path. (Or darcs or hg, if you're using darcs or mercurial to store the wiki data.) Gitit assumes that the page files (stored in the git repository) are encoded as UTF-8. Even page names may be UTF-8 if the file...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 11
    Reflex Platform

    Reflex Platform

    A curated package set and set of tools that let you build Haskell

    Reflex Platform is a curated package set and set of tools that let you build Haskell packages so they can run on a variety of platforms. Reflex Platform is built on top of the nix package manager. The core packages in Reflex Platform are known to work together and are tested together. the core packages in Reflex Platform are cached so you can download prebuilt binaries from the public cache instead of building from scratch. Nix locks down dependencies even outside the Haskell ecosystem...
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 12
    Obelisk

    Obelisk

    Functional reactive web and mobile applications, with batteries

    Functional reactive web and mobile applications, with batteries included. Obelisk's goal is to represent a cohesive, highly-curated set of choices that Obsidian Systems has made for building these types of applications in a way that is extremely fast but does not compromise on production readiness. Obelisk allows you to build high-quality web and mobile applications very quickly using Reflex. In minutes you can go from an empty directory to an interactive application that works on web, iOS,...
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 13
    Elm

    Elm

    Compiler for Elm, a functional language for reliable webapps

    Elm uses type inference to detect corner cases and give friendly hints. NoRedInk switched to Elm about four years ago, and 300k+ lines later, they still have not had to scramble to fix a confusing runtime exception in production. The compiler guides you safely through your changes, ensuring confidence even through the most wide-reaching refactorings in unfamiliar codebases. Including your own, six months later. All Elm programs are written in the same pattern, eliminating doubt and lengthy...
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 14
    GHCid

    GHCid

    Very low feature GHCi based IDE

    ghcid is a minimalist development tool for Haskell that runs GHCi as a daemon, watches source files for changes, reloads automatically, and shows compile errors instantly—providing a tight edit-feedback loop. In general, to use ghcid, you first need to get ghci working well for you. In particular, craft a command line or .ghci file such that when you start ghci it has loaded all the files you care about (check :show modules). If you want to use --test check that whatever expression you want...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 15
    The HaskellR project

    The HaskellR project

    The full power of R in Haskell

    The HaskellR project provides an environment for efficiently processing data using Haskell or R code, interchangeably. HaskellR allows Haskell functions to seamlessly call R functions and vice versa. It provides the Haskell programmer with the full breadth of existing R libraries and extensions for numerical computation, statistical analysis and machine learning. Optionally, pass in the --nix flag to all commands if you have the Nix package manager installed. Nix can populate a local build...
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 16
    Kitten

    Kitten

    A statically typed concatenative systems programming language

    Kitten is an experimental, concatenative programming language that blends Forth/Joy-style stack programming with modern static typing and effect tracking. Programs are composed by chaining small words that transform a typed stack, and the compiler uses type inference to ensure compositions are valid. The language explores disciplined handling of side effects, aiming to separate pure transformations from operations that perform I/O or mutate state. Its design encourages small, reusable...
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 17
    niv

    niv

    Easy dependency management for Nix projects

    Niv is a tool designed for managing dependencies in Nix projects. It simplifies adding, updating, and removing package sources via a single nix/sources.json file, improving reproducibility and version control in Nix-based workflows. niv simplifies adding and updating dependencies in Nix projects. It uses a single file, nix/sources.json, where it stores the data necessary for fetching and updating the packages. Nix is a very powerful tool for building code and setting up environments. niv...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 18
    relude

    relude

    Safe, performant, user-friendly and lightweight Haskell library

    relude is a safe, performant, user-friendly and lightweight Haskell standard library. The default Prelude is not perfect and doesn’t always satisfy one’s needs. At this stage, you may want to try an alternative prelude library. relude has some strong goals and principles that it sticks to. That principles define the library's decisions and might tell you more about the priorities of the library. You can be more productive with a “non-standard” standard library, and relude helps you with...
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 19
    Polysemy

    Polysemy

    Higher-order, no-boilerplate monads

    Polysemy is a high-performance, zero-boilerplate effect system for Haskell, designed to simplify the handling of side effects in functional programs. Unlike traditional monad transformer stacks, Polysemy uses a modern approach based on freer monads and interpreters, allowing developers to define, compose, and interpret effects in a more modular and testable way. It aims to offer both flexibility and performance without sacrificing type safety or expressiveness.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 20
    Higher Order Kind

    Higher Order Kind

    A modern proof language

    A Kubernetes-based tool for creating local clusters, ideal for testing and CI/CD.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 21
    Scotty

    Scotty

    Haskell web framework inspired by Ruby's Sinatra, using WAI and Warp

    Scotty is a lightweight Haskell web framework inspired by Ruby’s Sinatra. It allows developers to build RESTful web applications and APIs with minimal boilerplate. Scotty is built on top of the WAI (Web Application Interface) and Warp server, making it fast and scalable. It emphasizes simplicity and ease of use, making it ideal for small- to medium-sized services or for developers learning web programming in Haskell.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 22
    Nix Output Monitor

    Nix Output Monitor

    Pipe your nix-build output through the nix-output-monitor

    nix-output-monitor (also known as nom) is a workflow tool that enhances the readability and usability of nix-build output by providing pretty, parsed summaries and highlighting important events during Nix builds. This was an experiment to write something fun and useful in Haskell, which proved to be useful to quite a lot of people. By now, nom is quite fully featured with support for nix v1 commands (e.g. nix-build) and nix v2 commands (e.g. nix build). At this point it seems like I will...
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 23
    GHCJS

    GHCJS

    Haskell to JavaScript compiler, based on GHC

    GHCJS is a Haskell-to-JavaScript compiler that reuses GHC’s front end to compile Haskell source into JavaScript for execution in browsers and Node.js. It aims to preserve Haskell’s semantics—including laziness and rich types—by shipping a small runtime and shims for core libraries. Developers write normal Haskell, use Cabal/Stack to build, then bundle the generated JavaScript alongside required support code. Interoperability with the JavaScript world is provided through a foreign-function...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 24
    Lamdu

    Lamdu

    Lamdu, towards the next generation IDE

    Lamdu is a programming language designed to be useful and delightful. This project aims to create a next-generation, live programming environment that radically improves the programming experience. A predictable user interface with rich code completions, without the possibility of syntax errors. Continuous, automatic code formatting without the user needing to deal with formatting.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 25
    Rome

    Rome

    Carthage cache for S3, Minio, Ceph, Google Storage, Artifactory, etc.

    Carthage cache for S3, Minio, Ceph, Google Storage, Artifactory and many others. Rome is a tool that allows developers on Apple platforms to use Amazon's S3, Minio, Ceph, other S3-compatible object stores or/and a local folder. The Rome binary is also attached as a zip to each release on the releases page here on GitHub. Suppose you're working a number of frameworks for your project and want to share those with your team. A great way to do so is to use Carthage and have team members point...
    Downloads: 9 This Week
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