What we’re about
Have you been writing software for a while and now want to go deeper into the philosophy and mechanics of programming languages? Have you been hearing about things like automated theorem proving, hybrid type checking, gradual types, and wondering whether you'll be finding them soon in mainstream programming languages? Are you interested out-of-the-mainstream programming language paradigms like logic programming? Have you heard mathematical-sounding terms like lambda calculus and pi calculus, and wondering whether understanding them will make you a better programmer? If so, welcome.
We're focused less on spreading the gospel of functional programming (although we assume you know something about it) than on figuring out what makes programming languages of any paradigm expressive and reliable. And we try to take a more concrete approach than category theory's high-level overview of programming language structures, coming up with code we can execute and tools we can use.
Upcoming events (2)
See all- One more time! SOFP Chapter 14: Laws of Monad TransformersNeeds location
Let's try to do what we were planning to do with the last meeting (before we got hijacked by our effect handler discussion), and pick with Section 14.2 (laws of monad transformers) of The Science of Functional Programming (https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/v6st93ahgp44pehqeyl1i/sofp-draft-2023-09-30.pdf?rlkey=3cplruvoer9ecns9ne66hpzfw&dl=0).
We'll post the link to the meeting on this page shortly before the scheduled start of the meeting.