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Within LTS Haskell 24.34 (ghc-9.10.3)

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  1. package glib

    Binding to the GLIB library for Gtk2Hs. GLib is a collection of C data structures and utility functions for the GObject system, main loop implementation, for strings and common data structures dealing with Unicode. This package only binds as much functionality as required to support the packages that wrap libraries that are themselves based on GLib.

  2. package hackage-security

    Hackage security library The hackage security library provides both server and client utilities for securing the Hackage package server (https://hackage.haskell.org/). It is based on The Update Framework (https://theupdateframework.com/), a set of recommendations developed by security researchers at various universities in the US as well as developers on the Tor project (https://www.torproject.org/). The current implementation supports only index signing, thereby enabling untrusted mirrors. It does not yet provide facilities for author package signing. The library has two main entry points: Hackage.Security.Client is the main entry point for clients (the typical example being cabal), and Hackage.Security.Server is the main entry point for servers (the typical example being hackage-server).

  3. package hint

    A Haskell interpreter built on top of the GHC API This library defines an Interpreter monad. It allows to load Haskell modules, browse them, type-check and evaluate strings with Haskell expressions and even coerce them into values. The library is thread-safe and type-safe (even the coercion of expressions to values). It is, essentially, a huge subset of the GHC API wrapped in a simpler API.

  4. package hslua-typing

    Type specifiers for Lua. Structure to hold detailed type information. The primary use-case at this time are auto-generated docs.

  5. package hspec-expectations-lifted

    A version of hspec-expectations generalized to MonadIO A version of hspec-expectations generalized to MonadIO

  6. package hspec-golden

    Golden tests for hspec Golden tests store the expected output in a separated file. Each time a golden test is executed the output of the subject under test (SUT) is compared with the expected output. If the output of the SUT changes then the test will fail until the expected output is updated. hspec-golden allows you to write golden tests using the popular hspec.

    describe "myFunc" $
    it "generates the right output with the right params" $
    let output = show $ myFunc params
    in defaultGolden "myFunc" output
    
    Please see the README on GitHub for more information.

  7. package hspec-smallcheck

    SmallCheck support for the Hspec testing framework SmallCheck support for the Hspec testing framework

  8. package hspec-tmp-proc

    Simplify use of tmp-proc from hspec tests Reduces boilerplate when using tmp-proc with hspec

  9. package hsyslog

    FFI interface to syslog(3) from POSIX.1-2001 A Haskell interface to syslog(3) as specified in POSIX.1-2008. The entire public API lives in System.Posix.Syslog. There is a set of exposed modules available underneath that one, which contain various implementation details that may be useful to other developers who want to implement syslog-related functionality. Users of syslog, however, do not need them. An example program that demonstrates how to use this library is available in the examples directory of this package.

  10. package html-conduit

    Parse HTML documents using xml-conduit datatypes. This package uses tagstream-conduit for its parser. It automatically balances mismatched tags, so that there shouldn't be any parse failures. It does not handle a full HTML document rendering, such as adding missing html and head tags. Note that, since version 1.3.1, it uses an inlined copy of tagstream-conduit with entity decoding bugfixes applied.

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