Ricardo Wurmus writes: > Christopher Baines writes: > >>> Carlo Holl (15): >>> gnu: Add ghc-control-monad-free. >>> gnu: Add ghc-csv. >>> gnu: Add ghc-decimal. >>> gnu: ghc-doctest: Update to 0.16.3. >>> gnu: Add ghc-hspec-megaparsec. >>> gnu: Add ghc-lucid. >>> gnu: Add ghc-only. >>> gnu: Add ghc-text-short. >>> gnu: Add ghc-tabular. >>> gnu: Add ghc-uglymemo. >>> gnu: Add ghc-wizards. >>> gnu: Add ghc-cassava. >>> gnu: Add ghc-cassava-megaparsec. >>> gnu: Add ghc-hledger-lib. >>> gnu: Add hledger. >>> >>> gnu/packages/finance.scm | 63 ++++ >>> gnu/packages/haskell-xyz.scm | 557 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- >>> 2 files changed, 608 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) >> >> Awesome! I went through and tweaked some descriptions and wrapping and >> pushed to master as e6bfb02eb79777b760031384d4a3c14239f7fb55. > > Unfortunately, some of these packages are the latest versions on > Hackage, but we need to ensure that all Haskell packages are picked at > versions corresponding to the currently supported version of LTSHaskell > in Guix. We are behind the current LTSHaskell with our packages, so now > we have the situation where we have packages that are *newer* than the > latest LTSHaskell release and packages that are *older* than what the > latest LTSHaskell release prescribes. > > We should fix this soon, because mixing Haskell packages from different > LTS releases (or even ignoring the LTS releases in favour of the latest > versions on Hackage) results in dependency hell for those users who want > to use Guix for Haskell development. I'm not really aware of any Haskell specific packaging practices, and while I can't guarantee I'd have read it, if there is a reason to not use the latest version of Haskell packages, it would be good to have that reason set out in the docs [1]. 1: https://guix.gnu.org/manual/en/html_node/Packaging-Guidelines.html#Packaging-Guidelines I didn't look too carefully at the versions here, apart from the ghc-doctest package, where I concluded that any related packages that failed to build were already broken.