Difference between revisions of "Latest developments"

From Clean
Jump to navigationJump to search
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The Clean team does its best to deliver reliable software. It therefore might take some time before a new release is published. On this site we will keep you informed about the latest developments. Please be patient, software development always takes more time than expected.
+
If you want to stay informed about the latest development of Clean, you can follow what we do through our Gitlab website.
  
== The Clean Compiler ==
+
On https://gitlab.com/clean-and-itasks/ we host our latest unreleased code, and track progress of new features and bugfixes.
We are adding a new front-end to the Clean compiler that will accept Haskell '98 source code. Which is good news for many people, we hope. Not only there will be another Haskell '98 compiler, but it should be one that compiles fast and produces efficient code. Another important property is that Haskell and Clean code can be mixed! So, Clean users can make use of Haskell libraries, while Haskell users can make use of Clean libraries (such as the iTask library, [[Sparkle]], and Gast)) and Clean features (such as uniqueness typing, dynamic typing, and generic programming.
 
 
 
Although many things already work, we do not dare to say anything about the release date.
 
 
 
== The [[iTasks]] combinator library for the web ==
 
 
 
At the ICFP 2007 conference we presented [[iTasks]] [http://www.st.cs.ru.nl/papers/2007/plar2007-ICFP07-iTasks.pdf]: a multi-user workflow system for the web. With this library, one can assign tasks to users and control the order in which these tasks have to be performed. A user uses a browser to perform the tasks assigned to him or her. The iTask system is therefore also very suited for web programming and web form handling. The tasks are defined on a very high level declarative monadic style.
 
 
 
The new release of the iTask library we are working on will support:
 
* Ajax handling of iTasks
 
* Client side evaluation of iTasks
 
 
 
With a simple annotation an iTask is evaluated on the client instead of on the server. To make this possible we run full blown Clean applications in the browser as Java applet, making use of the fast Sapl interpreter [http://www.st.cs.ru.nl/papers/2007/janj2007-TFP06-EfficientInterpretationOfSAPL.pdf]. The system automatically switches between client side and server side evaluation when needed.
 
 
 
We used and released this new system at the [http://www.st.cs.ru.nl/AFP_TFP_2008/ The 6th International Summer School on Advanced Functional Programming]
 

Latest revision as of 11:10, 23 February 2022

If you want to stay informed about the latest development of Clean, you can follow what we do through our Gitlab website.

On https://gitlab.com/clean-and-itasks/ we host our latest unreleased code, and track progress of new features and bugfixes.