Ok, I have to admit, I have no idea if this is an April fool's joke or not. Congratulations for demonstrating that April fools jokes can still be subtle (whether intentionally or not!) -- [[Jon]] > Having said all that, have you looked at erlang? Have you heard of couchdb? > I'd strongly recommend looking at that. -- [[Jon]] >> I've glanced at couchdb, but don't see how it would tie in with ikiwiki. >> --[[Joey]] >>> It doesn't really. I recently (re-)read about couchdb and thought that >>> what it was trying to do had some comparisons with the thinking going on >>> in [[todo/structured_page_data]]. -- [[Jon]] ----- I'm torn about this idea, if it's actually serious. I'm very comfortable programming in Perl, and have written quite a few modules for IkiWiki, and it would be a huge pain to have to start from scratch all over again. On the other hand, this could be a motivation for me to learn Haskell. My only encounter with Haskell has been a brief time when I was using the Xmonad window manager, but it looks like an interesting language. Functional programming is cool. There are a lot of interesting plusses for Haskell you note (in the parent page), but it's true that the idea is horribly daunting (as [[Joey]] said "If only I had a spare year"). Is there any way that you could "start small"? Because nothing will ever happen if the task is too daunting to even start. > This seems destined to remain a thought experiment unless something like > that can be done, or I get a serious case of second system disease. > > I've considered doing things like using the external plugin interface > to run a separate haskell program, which would allow implementing > arbitrary plugins in haskell (starting with a pandoc plugin..), > and could perhaps grow to subsume the perl code. However, this would > stick us with the perl data structures, which are not a very good fit > for haskell. --[[Joey]] On further thought... perhaps it would be easier to fork or contribute to an existing Haskell-based wiki, such as Hakyll? --[[KathrynAndersen]] > As far as I know there are no other wikis (haskell or otherwise) > that are wiki compilers. Since we know from experience that dealing > with static compilation turns out to be one of the trickiest parts of > ikiwiki, I'm doubtful about trying to bolt that into one. --[[Joey]] >> Haykll isn't a wiki but it does do static compilation. The missing >> parts are: the web interface, the wiki link processing, and page >> dependency stuff. -- [[tychoish]] >>> (nods) Which is why I suggested it. I'm not sure whether it would be easier to "bolt on" those things than static compilation, but it could be worth looking at, at least. -- [[KathrynAndersen]]