Michael T. Richter wrote:
I have a dream. It's not a little dream. It's a big dream. I have a
dream that someday I can find a UNIX/Linux text editor for Haskell
hacking (and possibly two or three hundred other programming languages,
although that's optional) that can give me all of the following:
1. A real GUI environment that takes into account some of the HID
advances made in the past 30 years. (Emacs and Vim don't count,
in other words.)
That particular part is trolling. Both emacs and vim take into account
many of the HID advances made in the past 30 years. You're going to have
to be more explicit about what you find unacceptable about them to get
useful answers, in my opinion.
I can't speak for vim, but emacs certainly satisfies 2.3, 2.4, 3, 4, 5,
6, and 7. (I'm not sure if 5 is 100% out-of-the-box but it would be
very easy to sort it out if not).
2.5 I'd not really thought about before as an interesting requirement.
Could be useful.
2. Good quality syntax highlighting for Haskell that includes all of
the usual syntax highlighting goodies, plus:
3. the ability to seamlessly handle raw Haskell and both common
forms of Literate Haskell;
4. the ability to properly highlight Haddock comments;
5. the ability to highlight functions and types from libraries
(user-expandable) differently from local functions and types.
3. Line folding to hide and show blocks of code.
4. Code completion (user-expandable, ideally) for common library
functions, type declarations, etc.
5. Easy, quick access to online documentation for said functions and
declarations.
6. Good (ideally scriptable) access to external utilities for
compilation, debugging, profiling, type inference, project
management, etc.
7. A good plug-in system (ideally written in Haskell?) for expansion.
Is there such a beast available out there somewhere? If not, is such a
beast lurking in the background ready to pounce in the near future?
--
*Michael T. Richter* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> (*GoogleTalk:* [EMAIL PROTECTED])
/I have to wonder why people think that when they can't manage local
personnel within easy strangling and shooting distance, then they can
manage personnel thousands of miles away that have different languages,
cultures, and business rules. (Joe Celko)/
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