The Haskell Interlude

This is the Haskell Interlude, where the five co-hosts (Wouter Swierstra, Andres Löh, Alejandro Serrano, Niki Vazou, and Joachim Breitner) chat with Haskell guests!

https://haskell.foundation/podcast/

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 54m. Bisher sind 50 Folge(n) erschienen. Dieser Podcast erscheint alle 3 Wochen.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 1 day 20 hours 51 minutes

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00: Teaser


This is the Haskell Interlude! 
Welcome to our new Haskell podcast, where the five co-hosts, Wouter Swierstra, Andres Löh, Alejandro Serrano, Niki Vazou, and Joahim Breitner introduce themselves.  


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 July 12, 2021  5m
 
 

episode 1: 01: Emily Pillmore


The guest of our first regular episode is Emily Pillmore, CTO of the Haskell Foundation. The hosts are Alejandro Serrano and Andres Löh. We talk about Emily's path to Haskell, the role of the Haskell Foundation and the CTO within the Haskell Foundation, about current projects, the Haskell Community and about Emily's work on Optics.


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 August 9, 2021  1h14m
 
 

episode 2: 02: Lennart Augustsson


The guest in our second episode is Lennart Augustsson. The hosts are Wouter Swierstra and Niki Vazou. We talk about Lennart's long history with Haskell, about the various jobs he has had, all the compilers he has written, and about dependent types.


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 September 30, 2021  1h8m
 
 

episode 3: 03: Gabriella Gonzalez


The guest in our second episode is Gabriella Gonzalez. The hosts are Joachim Breitner and Alejandro Serrano. We talk about Dhall, Nix, and Haskell, learn why Gabriella's packages are sometimes called after characters of computer games, and get to know her elevator pitch for educating Haskell. The interviewee now goes by Gabriella as their preferred name, but at the time was still using Gabriel.


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 October 14, 2021  1h0m
 
 

episode 4: 04: Jasper Van der Jeugt


Jasper Van der Jeug is interviewed by Niki Vazou and Joachim Breitner. Jasper plays an important role in the Haskell community, helping with haskell.org, the Google Summer of Code project, ZuriHac and the ICPF programming contest, so there is much to talk about.


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 October 29, 2021  1h3m
 
 

episode 5: 05: Chris Smith


Chris Smith is interviewed by Joachim Breitner and Andres Löh. Chris is the author of the CodeWorld teaching tool and discusses why too much curry in the language can make error messages hard to digest and why a self respecting testing library certainly should be used to test itself.   


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 November 12, 2021  1h7m
 
 

episode 6: 06: Graham Hutton


Graham Hutton is interviewed by Wouter Swierstra and Andres Löh. Graham is known for his work on Haskell both in research and teaching Haskell, and in particular his Haskell book. Graham will tell us a little bit about how his book came about and give us advice for how to write a book ourselves, but also look back on his experience using Haskell and teaching Haskell in the last thirty years, and tell us a little bit about how bad the compile times were for the very first versions of GHC...


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 November 26, 2021  58m
 
 

episode 7: 07: José Calderón


José Calderón  is interviewed by Niki Vazou and Wouter Swierstra .  José has been working on functional programming at Galois and University of Maryland.  He tells us about his research background in many different continents, his experience with teaching compilers, the relation between music and functional programming and the "Recursive Programming Techniques" book that in the  1970s captured the essence of functional programming. 


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 December 17, 2021  56m
 
 

episode 8: 08: Théophile Choutri


Niki Vazou and Andres Löh are joined by guest Théophile Choutri (they/them), who also goes by Hécate. Théophile coordinates multiple projects and volunteer groups within the Haskell Foundation, notably the Haskell School project (intending to provide a free online open source library for teaching Haskell), and works on improving GHC core documentation and developing an alternative to Hackage...


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 January 7, 2022  1h4m
 
 

episode 9: 09: Sebastian Graf


Sebastian Graf is interviewed by Joachim Breitner and Alejandro Serrano.  Sebastian is one of the most active contributors to GHC, and tells of this experience, from his very first commit to GHC to his current work on the pattern coverage checker and demand analyzer. He also gives us hints on how to reason about the strictness of Haskell programs.


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 February 10, 2022  1h1m