This section lists Glasgow Haskell infelicities in its implementation of Haskell 98. See also the “when things go wrong” section (Chapter 8) for information about crashes, space leaks, and other undesirable phenomena.
The limitations here are listed in Haskell-Report order (roughly).
May not go through. If you add a “string gap” every few thousand characters, then the strings can be as long as you like.
Bear in mind that string gaps and the -cpp option don't mix very well (see Section 3.9.1).
It might work, but it's just begging for trouble.
None known.
Several modules internal to GHC are visible in the standard namespace. All of these modules begin with Prel, so the rule is: don't use any modules beginning with Prel in your program, or you will be comprehensively screwed.
Arguably not an infelicity, but… Bear in mind that operations on Int, Float, and Double numbers are unchecked for overflow, underflow, and other sad occurrences. (note, however that some architectures trap floating-point overflow and loss-of-precision and report a floating-point exception, probably terminating the program).
Use Integer, Rational, etc., numeric types if this stuff keeps you awake at night.
This code fragment should elicit a fatal error, but it does not:
main = print (array (1,1) [ 1:=2, 1:=3 ]) |
Plain old tuples of arbitrary size do work.
HOWEVER: standard instances for tuples (Eq, Ord, Bounded, Ix Read, and Show) are available only up to 5-tuples.
These limitations are easily subvertible, so please ask if you get stuck on them.
Haskell 98 embraces the Unicode character set, but GHC doesn't handle it. Yet.