\documentclass[]{article} \usepackage{amssymb,amsmath} \usepackage{ifxetex,ifluatex} \ifxetex \usepackage{fontspec,xltxtra,xunicode} \defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex-text,Scale=MatchLowercase} \else \ifluatex \usepackage{fontspec} \defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex-text,Scale=MatchLowercase} \else \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \fi \fi \usepackage{listings} \lstnewenvironment{code}{\lstset{language=Haskell,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily}}{} \ifxetex \usepackage[setpagesize=false, % page size defined by xetex unicode=false, % unicode breaks when used with xetex xetex, colorlinks=true, linkcolor=blue]{hyperref} \else \usepackage[unicode=true, colorlinks=true, linkcolor=blue]{hyperref} \fi \hypersetup{breaklinks=true, pdfborder={0 0 0}} \setlength{\parindent}{0pt} \setlength{\parskip}{6pt plus 2pt minus 1pt} \setlength{\emergencystretch}{3em} % prevent overfull lines \setcounter{secnumdepth}{0} \begin{document} \section{lhs test} \texttt{unsplit} is an arrow that takes a pair of values and combines them to return a single value: \begin{code} unsplit :: (Arrow a) => (b -> c -> d) -> a (b, c) d unsplit = arr . uncurry -- arr (\op (x,y) -> x `op` y) \end{code} \texttt{(***)} combines two arrows into a new arrow by running the two arrows on a pair of values (one arrow on the first item of the pair and one arrow on the second item of the pair). \begin{verbatim} f *** g = first f >>> second g \end{verbatim} Block quote: \begin{quote} foo bar \end{quote} \end{document}