My coworker who is new to Haskell was pointing out that for such an important function to Yesod, this one is lacking any documentation. It's slightly hard to document because people could provide various implementations for it, but I think this description captures the essence pretty well, and notes the important implicit behavior of opening a transaction. |
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| .github | ||
| demo | ||
| yesod | ||
| yesod-auth | ||
| yesod-auth-oauth | ||
| yesod-bin | ||
| yesod-core | ||
| yesod-eventsource | ||
| yesod-form | ||
| yesod-newsfeed | ||
| yesod-persistent | ||
| yesod-sitemap | ||
| yesod-static | ||
| yesod-test | ||
| yesod-websockets | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .travis.yml | ||
| appveyor.yml | ||
| CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| Dockerfile | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| README | ||
| README.md | ||
| ReleaseNotes.md | ||
| sources.txt | ||
| stack-lts-9.yaml | ||
| stack-lts-11.yaml | ||
| stack-persistent-2-9.yaml | ||
| stack.yaml | ||
Yesod Web Framework
An advanced web framework using the Haskell programming language. Featuring:
- safety & security guaranteed at compile time
- developer productivity: tools for all your basic web development needs
- raw performance
- fast, compiled code
- techniques for constant-space memory consumption
- asynchronous IO
- this is built in to the Haskell programming language (like Erlang)
Learn more about Yesod on its main website. If you want to get started using Yesod, we strongly recommend the quick start guide, based on the Haskell build tool stack.
Hacking on Yesod
Yesod consists mostly of four repositories:
git clone --recursive http://github.com/yesodweb/shakespeare
git clone --recursive http://github.com/yesodweb/persistent
git clone --recursive http://github.com/yesodweb/wai
git clone --recursive http://github.com/yesodweb/yesod
Each repository can be built with stack build.