Haskell is a purely functional programming language create in 1990. This Hello World example will help you get started with Haskell. Install Haskell for your system from the Haskell website. The program installed is called ghc which stands for the Glasgow Haskell Compiler. It can be run interactively or as a compiler.
Running Interactively
To run interactively invoke Haskell with
ghc --interactive
Once in the REPL, you can start entering commands. Try this:
putStrLn "Hello, world!"
There's your hello world! The function putStrLn outputs a string as a line. The interactive mode accepts commands that are prefixed with a colon. Here are a couple commands you can try out.
:set prompt ">>>"
:show languages
:cd C:\Users\NanoDano\haskell
:show modules
:load hello.hs
:show modules
:main
:quit
Compiling Haskell
Instead of running interactively you can compile files to create an executable. The -o option lets you specify the name of the output file. The input file in this example is hello.hs
We can't just drop in a putStrLn call the way we would with something like Python. We have to define a main function. When the program is run that will be the main entry point, just like all other languages. Here is the contents of hello.hs.
main = putStrLn "Hello, world!"
Compile it with
ghc -o hello hello.hs
And run it with
./hello