One student session will be held every Wednesday from XX-YY at WHERE.
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-See [below](#installing) for how to get the programming languages running on your computer.
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-* Links for help [[learning Scheme]]
-* Links for help [[learning OCaml]]
-* [[Translating between OCaml Scheme and Haskell]]
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-[[Lambda Evaluator]]: Usable in your browser. It can help you check whether your answer to some of the homework questions works correctly. There is also now a [library](/lambda_library) of lambda-calculus arithmetical and list operations, some relatively advanced.
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-* We've added a [[Monad Library]] for OCaml.
-* We've posted a [[State Monad Tutorial]].
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-##[[Offsite Reading]]##
-There's lots of links here already to tutorials and encyclopedia entries about many of the notions we'll be dealing with.
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+## [[Jump to content (lecture notes and more)|topics/content.mdwn]] ##
## Announcements ##
of the extent to which they emphasize, and are designed around those idioms. Languages like Python and JavaScript are sometimes themselves
described as "more functional" than other languages, like C.
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-## What is Functional Programming? ##
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-Here's a [survey conducted at Microsoft](http://research.microsoft.com/apps/pubs/default.aspx?id=141506) asking programmers what they understand "functional programming" to be. Don't take their responses to be authoritative... this is a just a "man in the street" (seat?) poll.
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-Read more about the [uptake of Haskell](http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2010/12/haskell-researchers-announce-discovery.html) among programmers in the street.
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In any case, here is some more context for the three languages we will be focusing on.
* **Scheme** is one of two or three major dialects of *Lisp*, which is a large family
<a name=installing></a>
[[How to get the programming languages running on your computer]]
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-[[Family tree of functional programming languages]]
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-[[Translating between OCaml Scheme and Haskell]]
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-Links to tutorials?
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## Recommended Books ##
* Another good book, covering some of the same ground as the Hankin, and the Hindley & Seldin, but delving deeper into typed lambda calculi, is *Types and Programming Languages*, by Benjamin Pierce, currently $77 hardback / $68 kindle on [Amazon](http://www.amazon.com/dp/0262162091). This book has many examples in OCaml.
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