library | - base (>=4.8.2 && <4.9 || >=4.9.1 && <4.10 || >=4.10.1 && <4.11 || >=4.11.0 && <4.12 || >=4.12.0 && <4.13 || >=4.13.0 && <4.14 || >=4.14.0 && <4.15 || >=4.15.0 && <4.16 || >=4.16.0 && <4.17 || >=4.17.0 && <4.18 || >=4.18.0 && <4.19 || >=4.19.0 && <4.20)
- ghc (>=7.10.3 && <7.11 || >=8.0.2 && <8.1 || >=8.2.2 && <8.3 || >=8.4.1 && <8.5 || >=8.6.1 && <8.7 || >=8.8.1 && <8.9 || >=8.10.1 && <8.11 || >=9.0.1 && <9.1 || >=9.2.1 && <9.3 || >=9.4.1 && <9.5 || >=9.6.1 && <9.7 || >=9.8.1 && <9.9)
- if impl(ghc<8.0.1)
|
---|
Flags
Automatic Flags
Name | Description | Default | noisy-deprecations | Prior to GHC 9.10, the DEPRECATED pragma can’t distinguish between terms
and types. Consenquently, you can get spurious warnings when there’s a name
collision and the name in the other namespace is deprecated. Or you can
choose to not get those warnings, at the risk of not being warned when
there’s a name collision and the namespace you’re referencing is the one
that’s deprecated. | Enabled |
Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info