On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 7:45 AM, Richard Senington <[email protected]>wrote:
> I have recently become interested in Dataflow programming and how it > related to functional languages. > I am wondering if the community has any advice on reading matter or other > directions to look at. > > So far I have been looking through the FRP libraries, using Haskell > functions with lazy lists for co-routines and > the Essence of Dataflow Programming by Uustalu and Vene where they propose > using co-monads. > > It looks as though Iteratees are also relevant but I have not got round to > looking at them in detail yet. > > Have I missed anything? > Arrows are a useful model for dataflow programming. But several FRP models are arrowized, so you might already have observed this. Which FRP models have you looked at? (there are several) I'm developing a model for reactive dataflows in open distributed systems, called reactive demand programming (RDP). It's basically distributed FRP with carefully constrained side-effects and signals that model disruption. The effects model enforces spatial idempotence and commutativity, which allows developers to perform refactoring and abstraction similar to that in a pure functional model. That signals model disruption allows 'open' composition and extension (e.g. runtime plugins). RDP is more composable than FRP because client-server relationships can be captured as regular RDP behaviors. RDP isn't ready for release, yet, but you can read a bit more at my blog: [1] http://awelonblue.wordpress.com/2011/05/21/comparing-frp-to-rdp/ Regards, David Barbour
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