+ <section>
+ <title>Getting Started</title>
+
+ <para>After installing Visual Haskell, start up Visual Studio as you
+ would normally, and observe that on the splash screen where it lists
+ the supported languages you should now see an icon for Visual
+ Haskell (if you don't see this, something has gone wrong... please let
+ us know).</para>
+
+ <para>Firstly, take a look at the bundled documentation. Go to
+ Help->Contents, and you should see the “Visual Haskell Help
+ Collection”, which contains a large collection of GHC and
+ Haskell-related documentaiton, including this document.</para>
+
+ <para>To start using Visual Haskell right away, create a new
+ project (File->New->Project...). Select one of the Haskell
+ project types (Console Application or Library Package), and hit Ok.
+ The project will be created for you, and an example module
+ added: <literal>Main.hs</literal> for an application, or
+ <literal>Module1.hs</literal> for a library.</para>
+
+ <para>You can now start adding code to
+ <literal>Main.hs</literal>, or adding new modules. To add a new
+ module, right-click on the <literal>src</literal> directory, and
+ select Add->New Item. Visual Haskell supports hierarchical
+ modules too: you can add new folders using the same Add menu to
+ create new nodes in the hierarchy.</para>
+
+ <para>If you have any errors in your code, they will be underlined with
+ a red squiggly line. Select the Tasks window (usually a tab near the
+ bottom of the Visual Studio window) to see the error messages, and
+ click on an error message to jump to it in the editor.</para>
+
+ <para>To build the program, hit Ctrl-Shift-B, or select one of the
+ options from the Build menu.</para>
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Editing Haskell code</title>