
User guide stack is a modern, cross-platform build tool for Haskell code. This guide takes a new stack user through the typical workflows. This guide will not teach Haskell or involve much code, and it requires no prior experience with the Haskell packaging system or other build tools. NOTE This document is probably out of date in some places and deserves a refresh. If you find this document helpful, please drop a note on. Stack's functions stack handles the management of your toolchain (including GHC — the Glasgow Haskell Compiler — and, for Windows users, MSYS), building and registering libraries, building build tool dependencies, and more. While it can use existing tools on your system, stack has the capacity to be your one-stop shop for all Haskell tooling you need.
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This guide will follow that stack-centric approach. What makes stack special? The primary stack design point is reproducible builds. If you run stack build today, you should get the same result running stack build tomorrow. There are some cases that can break that rule (changes in your operating system configuration, for example), but, overall, stack follows this design philosophy closely. To make this a simple process, stack uses curated package sets called snapshots. Macerich breaks above 200-day moving average.