Joachim Breitner

Running circle-packing in the Browser, now using GHCJS

Published 2015-06-20 in sections English, Haskell.

Quite a while ago, I wrote a small Haskell library called circle-packing to pack circles in a tight arrangement. Back then, I used the Haskell to JavaScript compiler fay to create a pretty online demo of that library, and shortly after, I create the identical demo using haste (another Haskell to JavaScript compiler).

The main competitor of these two compilers, and the most promising one, is GHCJS. Back then, it was too annoying to install. But after two years, things have changed, and it only takes a few simple commands to get GHCJS running, so I finally created the circle packing demo in a GHCJS variant.

Quick summary: Cabal integration is very good (like haste, but unline fay), interfacing JavaScript is nice and easy (like fay, but unlike haste), and a quick check seems to indicate that it is faster than either of these two. I should note that I did not update the other two demos, so they represent the state of fay and haste back then, respectively.

With GHCJS now available at my fingertips, maybe I will produce some more Haskell to be run in your browser. For example, I could port FrakView, a GUI program to render, expore and explain iterated function systems, from GTK to HTML.

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