The Abyss of Functional Language
a collection of links relating to FP
url: compiler.kaist.ac.kr/~khchoi/fp.html
Aldor
Functional language in which types are first class values. Normal functions returning types reproduce the features of template classes of other languages. Links to many projects around the world based on Aldor.
url: www.aldor.org/
Cayenne
A Haskell-like language with a powerful type system based on dependent types.
url: www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/cayenne/
Charity
Functional, categorical language, by University of Calgary, Canada. Innovative organization: based on theory of strong categorical datatypes divided into 2 subclasses: inductive (built up by constructors in the familiar way), and coinductive (broken down by destructors).
url: www.cpsc.ucalgary.ca/Research/charity/home.html
Eden
A functional language that aims at the programming of reactive systems and parallel algorithms on distributed memory systems.
url: www.mathematik.uni-marburg.de/inf/eden/
Extended ML
EML is a framework for specification and formal development of Standard ML programs.
url: www.dcs.ed.ac.uk/home/dts/eml/
FAQ for comp.lang.functional
Offers documentation as a frequently asked questions list. Also provides links to general topic, technical and other resources.
url: www.cs.nott.ac.uk/~gmh//faq.html
FISh
A novel functional language that claims to be faster than C in some cases.
url: linus.socs.uts.edu.au/~cbj/FISh/
Functional Beans Project
Goal: compile functional programs to Java bytecode, then interpret them as JavaBeans components, via H language, a small Haskell-like functional language almost fully based on Peyton Jones' Core language.
url: www.inf.ufrgs.br/~dubois/fbeans/
Functional Programming
Claus Reinke's extensive, well organized bookmarks on FP.
url: www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/cr3/FP/
Functional Programming in the Real World
Lists functional programs written primarily to perform to real-world tasks. Has pure programs (no side effects) and impure (some use of side effects). Languages: Caml, Clean, Erlang, Haskell, Miranda, Scheme, Standard ML.
url: www.research.avayalabs.com/user/wadler/realworld/
Functional Programming Languages in Education
A collection of information on the use of functional programming in teaching.
url: www.cs.kun.nl/fple/
HAL
A strongly typed, weakly moded, constraint logic/functional language designed to support the construction and extension and use of new constraint solvers.
url: www.csse.monash.edu.au/~mbanda/hal/
HOP
A functional language with "name-based" interaction between software components.
url: cui.unige.ch/OSG/research/Hop/hop.html
Hope
A small functional programming language, with polymorphic typing, algebraic types, pattern matching and higher-order functions.
url: www.soi.city.ac.uk/~ross/Hope/
Joy
Pure functional language based on function composition rather than application; concatenative language, very like Forth, inputs and outputs stacks, but with higher-level data types and sound mathematical foundation. [Open Source, BSD]
url: www.latrobe.edu.au/philosophy/phimvt/joy.html
Joy: AAA+ Software
Makes Joy, and free fully enabled evaluation version of Joy Developer: product descriptions, support, mail lists, FAQ, documentation, downloads, store.
url: www.aaa-plus.com/
Lemon
Functional language with inductive and coinductive types. Based on simply-typed lambda calculus augmented with sums, products, and mu and nu constructors for least (inductive) and greatest (coinductive) solutions to recursive type equations.
url: www.cis.ksu.edu/~bhoward/lemon.html
Mondrian
A simple functional scripting language for Internet applications.
url: www.mondrian-script.org/
NESL: A Parallel Programming Language
NESL is a parallel language with functional flavor developed at Carnegie Mellon by the SCandAL project.
url: www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~scandal/nesl.html
OPAL Project
Researches programming environment where advanced language concepts and formal development methods are used to make production-quality software. Strongly typed, higher-order, strict, pure FL; so can be classed with ML, Haskell, and other modern FLs. But also has unique algebraic flavor in the tradition of languages such as CIP-L, and Obj.
url: uebb.cs.tu-berlin.de/~opal/
Pizza
an extension of Java with functional features: parametric polymorphism, first-class (higher-order) functions, algebraic datatypes and pattern-matching.
url: www.cis.unisa.edu.au/~pizza/
PLAN: A Packet Language for Active Networks
A resource-bounded functional programming language that uses a form of remote procedure call to realize active networking.
url: www.cis.upenn.edu/~switchware/PLAN/
Q Equational Programming Language
An extensible functional programming language based on the term rewriting calculus.
url: www.musikwissenschaft.uni-mainz.de/~ag/q/q.php
Readscheme.org - Resources for Functional Programming
A variety of research resources on functional programming languages, implementation, and applications of functional programming languages.
url: readscheme.org/
Rita Loogen
Member of Eden team. Articles.
url: www.mathematik.uni-marburg.de/~loogen/
Scala
A general purpose programming language with a special focus on web services. It combines object-oriented, functional and concurrent elements. It is a successor of Funnel. Java-based implementation.
url: lamp.epfl.ch/scala/
Tutorial Papers in Functional Programming
John Hughes' list of FP-related tutorials and courses.
url: www.cs.chalmers.se/~rjmh/tutorials.html
The Unlambda Programming Language
A functional language designed for obscurity
url: www.eleves.ens.fr:8080/home/madore/programs/unlamb...
Wadler: Monads
Information on monads and functional programming
url: www.research.avayalabs.com/user/wadler/topics/mona...
What the hell are Monads?
A basic introduction to monads, monadic programming and IO.
url: www.abercrombiegroup.co.uk/~noel/research/monads.h...
Why Functional Programming Matters
John Hughes paper, dates from 1984, circulated as a Chalmers memo.
url: www.cs.chalmers.se/~rjmh/Papers/whyfp.html
ICFP 2002
The 2002 International Conference on Functional Programming covers the entire spectrum of functional programming, from practice to theory, and from established functional programming languages (Scheme, ML, Haskell) to novel language designs and to the functional aspects of object-oriented or concurrent languages. October 4-6, 2002 Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
url: icfp2002.cs.brown.edu/