Open Source Haskell Software Development Software

Haskell Software Development Software

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  • 1
    Hasura GraphQL Engine

    Hasura GraphQL Engine

    Blazing fast, instant realtime GraphQL APIs on your DB

    Hasura is an open-source product that accelerates API development by 10x by giving you GraphQL or REST APIs with built-in authorization on your data, instantly. Run Hasura, locally or in the cloud, and connect it to your new or existing databases to instantly get a production-grade GraphQL API. Developers and architects love Hasura because it takes no time to get started, doesn’t need them to be a GraphQL expert upfront, and saves their teams months of recurring effort in building, shipping, and maintaining their APIs. Hasura’s built-in RLS style authorization engine allows you to conveniently specify authorization rules at a model level, and safely expose the GraphQL API to developers inside or outside your organization. Hasura’s authz engine is enabling agile teams in fast-growing startups as well as powering mission-critical data access in highly regulated environments such as Fortune 500 healthcare, financial services and US federal agencies.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    Brick

    Brick

    A declarative Unix terminal UI library written in Haskell

    Brick is a Haskell terminal user interface (TUI) programming toolkit that enables developers to build rich, responsive terminal applications via a declarative model: you define a pure function that renders the UI from application state and supply state transition logic to handle events. brick exposes a declarative API. Unlike most GUI toolkits which require you to write a long and tedious sequence of widget creations and layout setup, brick just requires you to describe your interface using a set of declarative layout combinators. Event-handling is done by pattern-matching on incoming events and updating your application state. Under the hood, this library builds upon vty, so some knowledge of Vty will be necessary to use this library. Brick depends on vty-crossplatform, so Brick should work anywhere Vty works (Unix and Windows). Brick releases prior to 2.0 only support Unix-based systems.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 3
    FOSSA CLI

    FOSSA CLI

    Fast, portable and reliable dependency analysis for any codebase

    FOSSA CLI is a command-line tool that scans your codebase to identify open-source dependencies and their associated licenses and vulnerabilities. It integrates into CI/CD pipelines to provide automated compliance checks, license audits, and security analysis. Designed for enterprise software teams, FOSSA CLI helps enforce open-source policies at scale and provides accurate, automated insights into third-party software usage through deep analysis of transitive dependencies and ecosystem-specific configurations.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 4
    Tidal

    Tidal

    Pattern language

    Tidal Cycles (or just Tidal for short) is software for making patterns with code, whether live coding music at algoraves or composing in the studio. It includes a simple and flexible notation for rhythmic sequences and an extensive library of patterning functions for combining and transforming them. This allows you to quickly create complex patterns from simple ingredients. By default, sound is made with the featureful SuperDirt synth/sampler, but you can control other synths using Open Sound Control (OSC) or MIDI. Whether you're using SuperDirt or a synth, every filter and effect can be manipulated independently with Tidal patterns. Tidal is embedded in the Haskell language, although you don't have to learn Haskell to learn Tidal. You can learn Tidal through experimentation and play, most Tidal coders have little or no experience in software engineering.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 5
    Wasp

    Wasp

    A programming language that understands what a web app is

    Wasp (Web Application Specification Language) is a declarative DSL (domain-specific language) for developing, building and deploying modern full-stack web apps with less code. Concepts such as app, page, user, login, frontend, production, etc. are baked into the language, bringing a new level of expressiveness and allowing you to get more work done with fewer lines of code. While describing high-level features with Wasp, you still write the rest of your logic in your favorite technologies (currently React, NodeJS, Prisma). Wasp is in alpha and is therefore likely to change a lot, have bugs and miss important features. Due to its expressiveness, you can create and deploy a production-ready web app from scratch with very few lines of concise, consistent, declarative code. When you need more control than Wasp offers, you can write code in existing technologies such as js/html/css/... and combine it with Wasp code!
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 6
    Clash

    Clash

    Haskell to VHDL/Verilog/SystemVerilog compiler

    Clash is a functional hardware description language that borrows both its syntax and semantics from the functional programming language Haskell. It provides a familiar structural design approach to both combinational and synchronous sequential circuits. The Clash compiler transforms these high-level descriptions to low-level synthesizable VHDL, Verilog, or SystemVerilog. Clash is an open-source project, licensed under the permissive BSD2 license, and actively maintained by QBayLogic. The Clash project is a Haskell Foundation affiliated project. Clash is built on Haskell which provides an excellent foundation for well-typed code. Together with Clash's standard library it is easy to build scalable and reusable hardware designs. Load your designs in an interpreter and easily test all your component without needing to setup a test bench. Although Clash offers many features, you sometimes need to directly access VHDL, Verilog, or SystemVerilog directly.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 7
    HLint

    HLint

    Haskell source code suggestions

    HLint is a linter for Haskell that suggests stylistic improvements and potential simplifications in Haskell code. It parses Haskell source files and provides hints to refactor code for better readability, maintainability, or performance. HLint is highly configurable and supports custom rules, integrations with CI tools, and editor plugins. It is widely used in the Haskell ecosystem for maintaining consistent code standards.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 8
    HaLVM

    HaLVM

    The Haskell Lightweight Virtual Machine (HaLVM)

    HaLVM is a Haskell-based unikernel system that lets you write entire virtual machines in Haskell and run them directly on a hypervisor, traditionally Xen. Instead of deploying a full operating system, you compile a Haskell program into a tiny image that boots as its own VM, which reduces the attack surface and startup time. The project adapts GHC and the Haskell runtime to a minimal environment, providing the I/O, networking, and memory facilities necessary for standalone services. Its design encourages highly isolated services—each VM does one job—making it attractive for security-sensitive components and research on microservice-style architectures. Developers get to keep Haskell’s strong typing, concurrency abstractions, and functional style while targeting bare virtual hardware. Although device support is intentionally narrow compared to general-purpose OSes, the trade-off is predictability and very small, auditable deployments.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 9
    Kitten

    Kitten

    A statically typed concatenative systems programming language

    Kitten is an experimental, concatenative programming language that blends Forth/Joy-style stack programming with modern static typing and effect tracking. Programs are composed by chaining small words that transform a typed stack, and the compiler uses type inference to ensure compositions are valid. The language explores disciplined handling of side effects, aiming to separate pure transformations from operations that perform I/O or mutate state. Its design encourages small, reusable building blocks that compose cleanly, while still permitting low-level control where performance matters. The implementation targets efficient compiled code and investigates how advanced type systems can improve reliability in a stack-based language. As a research project, Kitten serves both as a language to experiment with and as a vehicle for ideas about safety and structure in concatenative programming.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 10
    ShellCheck

    ShellCheck

    A static analysis tool for shell scripts

    ShellCheck is a GPLv3 tool that provides warnings and possible suggestions for bash/sh shell scripts. ShellCheck finds bugs in your shell scripts. You can cabal, apt, dnf, pkg or brew install it locally right now. ShellCheck highlights and clarifies typical beginner's syntax mistakes and issues that cause a shell to give a cryptic error message. It shows typical intermediate level semantic problems that cause a shell to behave in a abnormally and counter-intuitively. It can also discover ssubtle caveats, corner cases and pitfalls that may cause an user's working script to fail under probable future circumstances. ShellCheck.net is always synchronized to the latest git version, and is the simplest way to give ShellCheck a go.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 11
    hledger

    hledger

    Robust, fast, intuitive plain text accounting tool with CLI

    hledger is fast, reliable, free, multicurrency double-entry accounting software that runs on unix, mac, windows, and the web. With it you can track money, investments, cryptocurrencies, time, or any other quantifiable commodity; with a future-proof plain text file format, version control for your changes, and without needing any cloud service or vendor. Developed continuously since 2007, hledger is licensed under GNU GPLv3+, written in Haskell, and thoroughly tested, with $100 bounties for regressions reported. Currently, three user interfaces are provided out of the box: a powerful command line UI (hledger), a quick terminal UI (hledger-ui), and a simple web UI (hledger-web).
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 12
    Asterius

    Asterius

    A Haskell to WebAssembly compiler

    Asterius is a Haskell toolchain that compiles to WebAssembly, enabling Haskell programs to run in the browser and other Wasm hosts. It builds on GHC, lowers Haskell code to WebAssembly modules, and links them with a lightweight JavaScript runtime for I/O, GC interaction, and host integration. The toolchain provides commands to build and link (ahc/ahc-link), bundle assets, and target both browser and Node environments. Interop is a core focus: Haskell functions can call into JavaScript and vice versa, making it feasible to combine Haskell logic with web APIs. Asterius aims to keep as much of Haskell’s runtime model as practical while delivering the portability and startup characteristics of Wasm. By bridging GHC and WebAssembly, it opens a path to reuse Haskell libraries on the client side without switching languages.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 13
    Corrode

    Corrode

    C to Rust translator

    Corrode is an experimental translator that converts C code into Rust, intended to help migrate existing C codebases toward safer Rust idioms. It parses C, maps C types and constructs into Rust equivalents, and generates code that compiles under rustc, introducing unsafe only when necessary. The tool seeks to produce readable Rust that a developer can then refine by hand, rather than a perfect one-to-one mechanical translation. It handles common C features such as pointers, structs, enums, arrays, and function calls, while flagging areas that need attention during the migration. Preprocessor handling and tricky macro patterns are approached pragmatically, aiming for working output over exhaustive transformation. As a proof-of-concept, it demonstrates how automated tooling can accelerate moving from legacy C to a memory-safe language without a full rewrite.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 14
    Echidna

    Echidna

    Ethereum smart contract fuzzer

    Echidna is a weird creature that eats bugs and is highly electrosensitive (with apologies to Jacob Stanley) More seriously, Echidna is a Haskell program designed for fuzzing/property-based testing of Ethereum smarts contracts. It uses sophisticated grammar-based fuzzing campaigns based on a contract ABI to falsify user-defined predicates or Solidity assertions. We designed Echidna with modularity in mind, so it can be easily extended to include new mutations or test specific contracts in specific cases. Optional corpus collection, mutation and coverage guidance to find deeper bugs. Powered by Slither to extract useful information before the fuzzing campaign. Source code integration to identify which lines are covered after the fuzzing campaign. Curses-based retro UI, text-only or JSON output.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 15
    GHCJS

    GHCJS

    Haskell to JavaScript compiler, based on GHC

    GHCJS is a Haskell-to-JavaScript compiler that reuses GHC’s front end to compile Haskell source into JavaScript for execution in browsers and Node.js. It aims to preserve Haskell’s semantics—including laziness and rich types—by shipping a small runtime and shims for core libraries. Developers write normal Haskell, use Cabal/Stack to build, then bundle the generated JavaScript alongside required support code. Interoperability with the JavaScript world is provided through a foreign-function interface, allowing Haskell code to call browser APIs or Node modules and to be called back from JS. The ecosystem includes packages tailored to GHCJS (for example DOM bindings and FRP libraries), enabling full single-page apps written in Haskell. Because it mirrors GHC closely, many pure Haskell libraries “just work,” making it practical to share code between server and client.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 16
    GHCid

    GHCid

    Very low feature GHCi based IDE

    ghcid is a minimalist development tool for Haskell that runs GHCi as a daemon, watches source files for changes, reloads automatically, and shows compile errors instantly—providing a tight edit-feedback loop. In general, to use ghcid, you first need to get ghci working well for you. In particular, craft a command line or .ghci file such that when you start ghci it has loaded all the files you care about (check :show modules). If you want to use --test check that whatever expression you want to use works in that ghci session. Getting ghci started properly is one of the hardest things of using ghcid, and while ghcid has a lot of defaults for common cases, it doesn't always work out of the box. Expressions that read from standard input are likely to hang, given that Ghcid already uses the standard input to interact with Ghci.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 17
    Paperboy

    Paperboy

    a small .pdf management tool with a command-line UI

    Paperboy is a tiny .pdf management utility. If you download papers and other pdf documents, you might have noticed that filenames like 1412.4880.pdf are not terribly helpful for finding anything later on. This tool helps with that. It will offer to rename and move files to a specified folder, and it even gives some filename suggestions by looking at the content and the pdf metadata. Paperboy keeps its file management dumb on purpose (no keeping files in a database or hidden library folder), so you can uninstall it at any time and your files will remain perfectly accessible. Any pointers or help with regards to generate .deb, .rpm, AUR PKGBUILD, etc is appreciated. Ideally this could be mostly automated in CI, in the end Paperboy is just a single binary with a dependency or two. How do other packages do it? If you got a good example or link, open a GitHub issue! Make sure you have poppler installed, which will provide both pdftotext and pdfinfo.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 18
    The Aura Package Manager

    The Aura Package Manager

    A secure, multilingual package manager for Arch Linux

    Aura, a secure, multilingual package manager for Arch Linux. Aura's original purpose is as an AUR helper, in that it automates the process of installing packages from the Arch User Repositories. It is, however, capable of much more. Aura is a package manager for Arch Linux. Its original purpose is as an AUR helper, in that it automates the process of installing packages from the Arch User Repositories. It is, however, capable of much more. Aura doesn't just mimic pacman; it is pacman. All pacman operations and their sub-options are allowed. Some even hold special meaning in Aura as well. -S yields pacman packages and only pacman packages. This agrees with the above. In Aura, the -A operation is introduced for obtaining AUR packages. -A comes with sub-options you're used to (-u, -s, -i, etc.). PKGBUILDs from the AUR can contain anything. It's a user's responsibility to verify the contents of a PKGBUILD before building, but people can make mistakes and overlook details.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 19
    The Futhark Programming Language

    The Futhark Programming Language

    A data-parallel functional programming language

    Futhark is a small programming language designed to be compiled into efficient parallel code. It is a statically typed, data-parallel, and purely functional array language in the ML family, and comes with a heavily optimizing ahead-of-time compiler that presently generates either GPU code via CUDA and OpenCL, or multi-threaded CPU code. Futhark is not designed for graphics programming, but can instead use the compute power of the GPU to accelerate data-parallel array computations. The language supports regular nested data-parallelism, as well as a form of imperative-style in-place modification of arrays, while still preserving the purity of the language via the use of a uniqueness type system. While the Futhark language and compiler is an ongoing research project, it is quite usable for real programming and can compile nontrivial programs which then run on real machines at high speed.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 20
    Unison

    Unison

    A friendly programming language from the future

    Unison is an open source functional programming language based on a simple idea with big implications: code is content-addressed and immutable. Unison’s core idea is that code is immutable and identified by its content. This lets us reimagine many aspects of how a programming language works. We simplify codebase management, Unison has no builds, no dependency conflicts, and renaming things is trivial. The same core idea forms the basis for a runtime that robustly supports dynamic code deployment, allowing a single Unison program to describe entire elastic distributed systems. Though a lot of the work on Unison is still experimental and ongoing, we’re sharing an early alpha release of the language for you to test out. We’ll make a more finished release generally available soon. In the meantime, anyone is welcome to help with alpha testing.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 21
    erd

    erd

    Translates a plain text description of a relational database schema

    erd is a Haskell-based command-line tool that transforms a plain-text description of a relational database schema into a graphical entity-relationship diagram using common ER conventions. This utility takes a plain text description of entities, their attributes and the relationships between entities and produces a visual diagram modeling the description. The visualization is produced by using Dot with GraphViz. There are limited options for specifying color and font information. Also, erd can output graphs in a variety of formats, including but not limited to: pdf, svg, eps, png, jpg, plain text and dot. In case one wishes to have a statically linked erd as a result, this is possible to have by executing build-static_by-nix.sh: which requires the nix package manager to be installed on the building machine. NixOS itself is not a requirement.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 22
    stylish-haskell

    stylish-haskell

    Haskell code prettifier

    A simple Haskell code prettifier. The goal is not to format all of the code in a file since I find that kind of tools often "get in the way". However, manually cleaning up import statements, etc. gets tedious very quickly. This tool tries to help where necessary without getting in the way. Aligns and sorts import statements. Groups and wraps {-# LANGUAGE #-} pragmas, can remove (some) redundant pragmas. Removes trailing whitespace. Aligns branches in case and fields in records. Converts line endings (customizable) Replaces tabs by four spaces (turned off by default) Replaces some ASCII sequences by their Unicode equivalents (turned off by default) Format data constructors and fields in records.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 23
    Lsl Plus is an edit/compile/test environment for the Linden Scripting Language (LSL), implemented as an Eclipse plug-in.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 24
    We extend the Eclipse IDE with tools for development in Haskell, a functional programming language, providing support for a wide range of tools (compilers, interpreters, doc tools etc.) in a coherent, convenient and configurable environment.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 25
    Archive of Formal Proofs

    Archive of Formal Proofs

    A collection of machine-checkend mathematical proofs

    The Archive of Formal Proofs is a collection of proof libraries, examples, and larger scientifc developments, mechanically checked in the theorem prover Isabelle. It is organized in the way of a scientific journal. Submissions are refereed.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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