\begin{onlystandalone} \documentstyle[11pt,literate]{article} \begin{document} \title{Release notes for Glasgow Haskell} \author{The GHC Team\\ Department of Computing Science\\ University of Glasgow\\ Glasgow, Scotland\\ G12 8QQ\\ \\ Email: glasgow-haskell-\{users,bugs\}-request\@dcs.gla.ac.uk} \maketitle \begin{rawlatex} \tableofcontents \end{rawlatex} \clearpage \end{onlystandalone} % NOTE TO MAINTAINERS: the way these notes are organized: % (1) What's new in the current release % (2) What's next ("real soon now") % (3) What was new in previous releases (reverse chronological order) % (4) anything else % % Remember: this isn't the compiler documentation! -- it's just % pointers to it. Mentioning something in the release notes is not % the same as documenting it. \section[release-2-01]{Release notes for version~2.01---7/96} \input{2-01-notes.lit} %\section[release-RSN]{What we hope to do Real Soon Now} %\downsection %\input{real-soon-now.lit} %\upsection \section{Versions 0.26 through 0.29} GHC~0.26 (7/95) was the last major release of GHC for Haskell~1.2. GHC~0.27 (12/95) was a `` binary-only from-working-sources no-guarantees snapshot ... for i386-unknown-linuxaout and i386-unknown-solaris2 platforms...'' GHC~0.28 (5/96) was the same thing, for the i386-unknown-linux (ELF) platform. GHC~0.29 (7/96), released at the same time as 2.01, is just ``0.26 with bug fixes''; i.e., the current state-of-play on the Haskell~1.2 compiler development. \section{Old release notes} We used to include the release notes back to the dawn of time in this document. Made for a nice long document, but it wasn't that interesting. If you would like to see old release notes, just ask; we've still got 'em. \begin{onlystandalone} % \printindex \end{document} \end{onlystandalone}