I thought there would already be a question about this, but I can't find one.
I want my program to print out the date it was compiled on. What's the easiest way to set that up?
I can think of several possibilities, but none of them are what you'd call "easy". Ideally I'd like to be able to just do ghc --make Foo
and have Foo
print out the compilation date each time I run it.
Various non-easy possibilities that spring to mind:
Learn Template Haskell. Figure out how to use
Data.Time
to fetch today's date. Find a way how to transform that into a string. (Now my program requires TH in order to work. I also need to convince it to recompile that module every time, otherwise I get the compilation date for that module [which never changes] rather than the whole program.)Write a shell script that generates a tiny Haskell module containing the system date. (Now I have to use that shell script rather than compile my program directly. Also, shell scripting on Windows leaves much to be desired!)
Sit down and write some Haskell code which generates a tiny Haskell module containing the date. (More portable than previous idea - but still requires extra build steps or the date printed will be incorrect.)
There might be some way to do this through Cabal - but do I really want to package up this little program just to get a date facility?
Does anybody have any simpler suggestions?
ghc -DNOW="\"`date`\""
(no idea how that would look for a Windows shell), and in your module use{-# LANGUAGE CPP #-}
andnow = NOW
for the date string. Ugly hack, might just be ugly enough to push you to a cleaner alternative that takes more work.SET /P VAR=
, which reads text from stdin. If you pipe command output to a file, then pipe it back in, you can achieve the effect you want... but JESUS!! >_<