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Real World Haskell: Code You Can Believe in Paperback – Illustrated, 5 Dec. 2008
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- ISBN-100596514980
- ISBN-13978-0596514983
- EditionIllustrated
- PublisherO′Reilly
- Publication date5 Dec. 2008
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions17.78 x 4.32 x 23.34 cm
- Print length710 pages
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- Publisher : O′Reilly
- Publication date : 5 Dec. 2008
- Edition : Illustrated
- Language : English
- Print length : 710 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0596514980
- ISBN-13 : 978-0596514983
- Item weight : 916 g
- Dimensions : 17.78 x 4.32 x 23.34 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 952,370 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 822 in Online Shopping
- 935 in Programming Languages & Tools
- 1,543 in Computer Information Systems
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Customers find the book practical, with one mentioning it's great for compute-intensive and network-heavy applications. Moreover, the book receives positive feedback for its readability, with one customer noting it's excellent for getting into Haskell. However, the writing quality and comprehension receive mixed reviews, with some finding it well-written and easy to understand, while others disagree.
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Customers find the book practical, with one mentioning it's great for compute-intensive and network-heavy applications.
"Useful book" Read more
"Great practical book" Read more
"...though I have my doubts about its efficiency; it’s great for network-heavy applications, but is it quite so great for compute-intensive apps?..." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read, with one mentioning it serves as an excellent introduction to Haskell programming.
"...my way through this but it’s such a well written book, it’s a joy to read." Read more
"...In my view its worth reading if only to find out if Haskell is the right language for you." Read more
"Excellent book to get you into Haskell..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's comprehensibility, with some finding it explains difficult subjects in an understandable way, while one customer found it very hard to learn.
"...It also has a reputation of being very hard to learn. This is where “Real World Haskell” comes in...." Read more
"...to give the authors credit because this book explained a difficult subject in an understandable way...." Read more
"A book on a Programming Language can't get any better......" Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book.
"Just working my way through this but it’s such a well written book, it’s a joy to read." Read more
"...Not because it’s badly written; on the contrary, it’s written very well. It’s because there’s a huge amount of technical stuff to put over...." Read more
"...Not because it’s badly written; on the contrary, it’s written very well. It’s because there’s a huge amount of technical stuff to put over...." Read more
Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 December 2016Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseAfter a lifetime of programming in declarative languages like C, C++ and Java, I find it difficult to switch into the functional programming mindset. I suspect this is more to do with my age than anything else. I’m particularly interested in how to build systems that effectively make use of modern multi-core computers, assuming that we’ll soon have computers with hundreds of cores. In spite of what some experts say, I have grave doubts about our ability to reliably build such systems in the likes of Java; yes, there will some people who will be able to do it, but how will the common or garden developer do it?
Enter functional programming. Erlang has the ability to succeed with multi-cores, though I have my doubts about its efficiency; it’s great for network-heavy applications, but is it quite so great for compute-intensive apps? I’m not convinced yet that functional programming (Erlang excepted) has the ability *right now* to build hugely scalable multi-core apps - but I think the potential is there, and any developer putting the effort into becoming proficient at functional programming may be hugely rewarded in the future.
Given this hypothesis, how to go about it? Haskell has a reputation of being an extremely pure functional language. It also has a reputation of being very hard to learn. This is where “Real World Haskell” comes in. If you study this book right to the end, you’ll have made the mindset switch. Be warned though, it has 650 pages and is heavy going. Not because it’s badly written; on the contrary, it’s written very well. It’s because there’s a huge amount of technical stuff to put over. Recursion, folds, partial functions, lambda functions, typeclasses, and monads anyone? (Write programs using recursion in Java etc, and get used to stack overflows; not the best way to write highly stable apps).
Back in the 1990s I went through another mindset switch - from procedural thinking to object thinking. I’m finding this one harder. After studying a couple of hundred pages, and having studied Erlang previously, I began to experience the mindset switch. Unfortunately it was fragile, one minute I was thinking functionally and the next back to declarative. The real world intervened though, and I had to stop the study; so I slid back to declarative thinking. Real soon now I’m going to take another run at it. Of all the Haskell books, this is the one I’ll use. I’ve found others either too simple or too academic; for me, this book is just right.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 November 2020Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseJust working my way through this but it’s such a well written book, it’s a joy to read.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 February 2019Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseGreat practical book
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 June 2009Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis book is rich in content and motivation to learn one of the most interesting programming languages nowadays. For beginners and experts alike this book as something to offer for all of us. If you want to learn something new, something different, something better. Check out this book!
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 October 2013Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseA very nice, thought-provoking read. The theory and the hands-on examples are mixed in a perfect ratio to turn your imperative mind inside out.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 November 2010Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseIf you like getting down and dirty with code then this is the book for you. Unlike some books that deal with the theory of Haskell first, Real World Haskel gets you walking though code right off the bat. At first I felt like I was making real progress but this was, for me at least, a false dawn as things slow down after the first few chapters, but I think this is the fault of the subject and not the book. Although some of the examples used were a little esoteric (a whole chapter on a bar code reader!) I have to give the authors credit because this book explained a difficult subject in an understandable way. In my view its worth reading if only to find out if Haskell is the right language for you.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 September 2012Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseI bought the Kindle edition of this book having done functional programming with other languages before (Lisp and Scala). The first third or so of this book was material very familiar to me from those other languages and even here I found the book hard work. There were mistakes where the description in the text did not match the sample code. There was an instance of sample code not compiling, and infact the compile error was printed into the book in place of where the program output was expected (maybe this is only present in the Kindle print). Sample code was often too abstract using identifier names that did not help me to understand what the sample code was trying to achieve (ironic for "real world" haskell). In other cases the sample code required functions that would only be implemented much later in the book (very confusing if you are trying out the samples as you read).
The next third or so of the book was new territory for me, and here I found myself often second guessing the text of the book. I suspected mistakes but did not have the confidence to know for sure. At this point the online version of the book proved to be very helpful ([...]). Here there are plenty of online comments from readers of the book that correct many of the mistakes and clear up confusion. Take a skim at some of the comments there before you buy to get an indication of the types of problems this book has.
I gave up on this book at roughly the two thirds mark, and am now instead reading "Programming in Haskell". I have yet to complete this alternative book but so far it is of much higher standard than Real World Haskell.
Top reviews from other countries
tommasoReviewed in Italy on 27 February 20255.0 out of 5 stars wow!
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchasewow! many years ago I wrote my thesis on ML type system and its extensions possibilities, and now that I'm sixty this book is really a joy.
Haskell represents the legacy of ML philosophy and this book makes it available to everyone with clarity and freshness. I strongly advice it even if you will continue to program in c javascript php etc.
haskell helps you to think in a new clear way!
Justin HanekomReviewed in Canada on 24 July 20145.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseI love this computer language and I love this book. Well done!
GBReviewed in Germany on 16 May 20145.0 out of 5 stars Not an easy read, but definitely brilliant and worth studying
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseHaving a background in science, with this book I felt the way I used to feel with college textbooks back in my student days - you're happy if you can digest a page or two in a day. But once you understood the stuff, the knowledge becomes a part of your internal thinking and reasoning.
Chapter 10 with its ad-hoc monadic parser is ``a newbie killer''. The discussions of parseByte on the website with the text of the book helps. Reading on the state monad helps to understand the chapter too.
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United States on 28 March 20165.0 out of 5 stars How to enjoy this book:
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseIt is not the easiest language to learn. i recommend learning some other programming languages. Maybe python basics. Then maybe something higher level like C or C++ if you insist, or maybe Java. If your already an experienced programmer you may have the same experience as me. I found Haskell to be really interesting and a unique fun approach to solving issues. But keep in mind this is a functional language and object oriented programming is absent in this language. As a book i feel like its a good run though of how to program in Haskell. It provides interesting examples in it as well as being able to make a QR code scanner. If you read this book don't just skim though it. You will need to probably practise the examples multiple times and experiment a little. But if your paying attention and thinking about what they are saying in the book you should get the hang of it.
punterReviewed in France on 9 July 20155.0 out of 5 stars Comprehensive, clear, convenient
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseOut of several Haskell textbooks on my bookshelf (pretty much all you can find on Amazon & internet bar Bird's books), this is the one I refer to most often and quickly find an answer.
You may need other Haskell books too but you can't go wrong with this one.




