On 24 Apr 2009, at 14:37, Loup Vaillant wrote:

2009/4/23 Miguel Mitrofanov <miguelim...@yandex.ru>:
On 23 Apr 2009, at 12:17, Thomas Davie wrote:

Haskell is a very horizontal language, and to limit our horizontal space
seems pretty weird.

+1. I sometimes use lines up to 200 characters long, when I feel they would
be more readable.

200 sounds awfully long. Do you have any example?

Sure...

arrow :: forall (~>) b c d e. ( Arrow (~>), Show (d ~> e), Show (c ~> d), Show (b ~> c), Show b, Show c, Show d, Show e, Arbitrary (d ~> e), Arbitrary (c ~> d), Arbitrary (b ~> c), Arbitrary b, Arbitrary c, Arbitrary d, Arbitrary e, EqProp (b ~> e), EqProp (b ~> d), EqProp ((b,d) ~> c), EqProp ((b,d) ~> (c,d)), EqProp ((b,e) ~> (d,e)), EqProp ((b,d) ~> (c,e)), EqProp b, EqProp c, EqProp d, EqProp e) => b ~> (c,d,e) -> TestBatch

>.>

In all seriousness though, that one got broken, but I do find that I occasionally have lines around 100 characters that just look silly if I break them, this is a good example:

filterNonRoots (GCase e bs ) = filter ((/= e) <^(&&)^> (not . (`elem` bs)))

Bob
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