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.. _introduction-GHC:
Introduction to GHC
===================
This is a guide to using the Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC): an
interactive and batch compilation system for the
`Haskell 2010 <http://www.haskell.org/>`__ language.
GHC has two main components: an interactive Haskell interpreter (also
known as GHCi), described in :ref:`ghci`, and a batch compiler,
described throughout :ref:`using-ghc`. In fact, GHC consists of a single
program which is just run with different options to provide either the
interactive or the batch system.
The batch compiler can be used alongside GHCi: compiled modules can be
loaded into an interactive session and used in the same way as
interpreted code, and in fact when using GHCi most of the library code
will be pre-compiled. This means you get the best of both worlds: fast
pre-compiled library code, and fast compile turnaround for the parts of
your program being actively developed.
GHC supports numerous language extensions, including concurrency, a
foreign function interface, exceptions, type system extensions such as
multi-parameter type classes, local universal and existential
quantification, functional dependencies, scoped type variables and
explicit unboxed types. These are all described in
:ref:`ghc-language-features`.
GHC has a comprehensive optimiser, so when you want to Really Go For It
(and you've got time to spare) GHC can produce pretty fast code.
Alternatively, the default option is to compile as fast as possible
while not making too much effort to optimise the generated code
(although GHC probably isn't what you'd describe as a fast compiler :-).
GHC's profiling system supports "cost centre stacks": a way of seeing
the profile of a Haskell program in a call-graph like structure. See
:ref:`profiling` for more details.
GHC comes with a number of libraries. These are described in separate
documentation.
.. _getting:
Obtaining GHC
-------------
Go to the `GHC home page <http://www.haskell.org/ghc/>`__ and follow the
"download" link to download GHC for your platform.
Alternatively, if you want to build GHC yourself, head on over to the
:ghc-wiki:`GHC Building Guide <building>` to find out how to get the sources,
and build it on your system. Note that GHC itself is written in Haskell, so you
will still need to install GHC in order to build it.
.. _mailing-lists-GHC:
Meta-information: Web sites, mailing lists, etc.
------------------------------------------------
.. index::
single: mailing lists, Glasgow Haskell
single: Glasgow Haskell mailing lists
On the World-Wide Web, there are several URLs of likely interest:
- `GHC home page <http://www.haskell.org/ghc/>`__
- `GHC Developers Home <https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc>`__ (developer
documentation, wiki, and bug tracker)
We run the following mailing lists about GHC. We encourage you to join,
as you feel is appropriate.
``glasgow-haskell-users``
This list is for GHC users to chat among themselves. If you have a
specific question about GHC, please check the
`FAQ <http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/GHC/FAQ>`__ first.
Subscribers can post to the list by sending their message to
glasgow-haskell-users@haskell.org. Further information can be found
on the
`Mailman page <http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/glasgow-haskell-users>`__.
``ghc-devs``
The GHC developers hang out here. If you are working with the GHC API
or have a question about GHC's implementation, feel free to chime in.
Subscribers can post to the list by sending their message to
ghc-devs@haskell.org. Further information can be found on the
`Mailman page <http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs>`__.
There are several other Haskell and GHC-related mailing lists served by
``www.haskell.org``. Go to http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/
for the full list.
.. _bug-reporting:
Reporting bugs in GHC
---------------------
.. index::
single: bugs; reporting
single: reporting bugs
Glasgow Haskell is a changing system so there are sure to be bugs in it.
If you find one, please see :ghc-wiki:`this wiki page <report-a-bug>` for
information on how to report it.
.. _version-numbering:
GHC version numbering policy
----------------------------
.. index::
single: version, of ghc
As of GHC version 6.8, we have adopted the following policy for
numbering GHC versions:
Stable branches are numbered ``x.y``, where ⟨y⟩ is *even*. Releases
on the stable branch ``x.y`` are numbered ``x.y.z``, where ⟨z⟩ (>=
1) is the patchlevel number. Patchlevels are bug-fix releases only,
and never change the programmer interface to any system-supplied
code. However, if you install a new patchlevel over an old one you
will need to recompile any code that was compiled against the old
libraries.
The value of ``__GLASGOW_HASKELL__`` (see :ref:`c-pre-processor`)
for a major release ``x.y.z`` is the integer ⟨xyy⟩ (if ⟨y⟩ is a
single digit, then a leading zero is added, so for example in
version 6.8.2 of GHC we would have ``__GLASGOW_HASKELL__==608``).
.. index::
single: __GLASGOW_HASKELL__
We may make snapshot releases of the current stable branch
`available for
download <http://www.haskell.org/ghc/dist/stable/dist/>`__, and the
latest sources are available from
:ghc-wiki:`the git repositories <repositories>`.
Stable snapshot releases are named ``x.y.z.YYYYMMDD``. where
``YYYYMMDD`` is the date of the sources from which the snapshot was
built, and ``x.y.z+1`` is the next release to be made on that
branch. For example, ``6.8.1.20040225`` would be a snapshot of the
``6.8`` branch during the development of ``6.8.2``.
We may make snapshot releases of the HEAD `available for
download <http://www.haskell.org/ghc/dist/current/dist/>`__, and the
latest sources are available from
:ghc-wiki:`the git repositories <repositories>`.
Unstable snapshot releases are named ``x.y.YYYYMMDD``. where
``YYYYMMDD`` is the date of the sources from which the snapshot was
built. For example, ``6.7.20040225`` would be a snapshot of the HEAD
before the creation of the ``6.8`` branch.
The value of ``__GLASGOW_HASKELL__`` for a snapshot release is the
integer ⟨xyy⟩. You should never write any conditional code which
tests for this value, however: since interfaces change on a
day-to-day basis, and we don't have finer granularity in the values
of ``__GLASGOW_HASKELL__``, you should only conditionally compile
using predicates which test whether ``__GLASGOW_HASKELL__`` is equal
to, later than, or earlier than a given major release.
The version number of your copy of GHC can be found by invoking ``ghc``
with the ``--version`` flag (see :ref:`options-help`).
The compiler version can be tested within compiled code with the
``MIN_VERSION_GLASGOW_HASKELL`` CPP macro (defined only when
:extension:`CPP` is used). See :ref:`standard-cpp-macros` for details.
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