Site Map - skip to main content

Hacker Public Radio

Your ideas, projects, opinions - podcasted.

New episodes every weekday Monday through Friday.
This page was generated by The HPR Robot at


hpr3508 :: Differences between C# and Haskell

Tuula talks about some of the differences between C# and Haskell

<< First, < Previous, , Latest >>

Thumbnail of Tuula
Hosted by Tuula on 2022-01-12 is flagged as Clean and is released under a CC-BY-SA license.
haskell, c#, programming. (Be the first).
The show is available on the Internet Archive at: https://archive.org/details/hpr3508

Listen in ogg, spx, or mp3 format. Play now:

Duration: 00:28:32

Haskell.

A series looking into the Haskell (programming language)

This episode covers some of the differences between C# and Haskell. I'm probably going to omit lot of things accidentally.

  • Origin: practical language for solving real world problems vs. programming language research
  • Main paradigm: object oriented vs purely functional
  • Changing data: mutability vs. immutability
  • Data structures: inheritance vs. composition
  • Execution model: strict vs. nonstrict
  • Side effects: anywhere vs. specifically marked areas in the code

Thanks for listening, if you have any questions or comments, you can reach me via email or in fediverse, where I'm Tuula@tech.lgbt. Or even better, you could record your own hacker public radio episode.


Comments

Subscribe to the comments RSS feed.

Leave Comment

Note to Verbose Commenters
If you can't fit everything you want to say in the comment below then you really should record a response show instead.

Note to Spammers
All comments are moderated. All links are checked by humans. We strip out all html. Feel free to record a show about yourself, or your industry, or any other topic we may find interesting. We also check shows for spam :).

Provide feedback
Your Name/Handle:
Title:
Comment:
Anti Spam Question: What does the letter P in HPR stand for?
Are you a spammer?
What is the HOST_ID for the host of this show?
What does HPR mean to you?