Tomas Janousek f2aa84e102 ci: Only build haddock for hackage with the latest GHC
Cabal 3.10.2.0 exposes a bug in Haddock shipped with GHC 9.0 and 9.2, so
we need to work around it by bumping the version of GHC/Haddock we use
for building/uploading docs to Hackage, and to prevent build failures we
don't ever try to build haddocks for Hackage with older versions of
GHC/Haddock.

Related: https://github.com/haskell/haddock/issues/1582#issuecomment-1611412223
Related: https://github.com/haskell/cabal/issues/8326
Related: https://github.com/haskell/cabal/issues/9060
Related: https://github.com/haskell/cabal/pull/9073
Related: https://github.com/haskell/cabal/pull/9049
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XMonad logo

Hackage License Made in Haskell
Stack Cabal Nix
GitHub Sponsors Open Collective
Chat on #xmonad@irc.libera.chat Chat on #xmonad:matrix.org

xmonad

A tiling window manager for X11.

XMonad is a tiling window manager for X11. Windows are arranged automatically to tile the screen without gaps or overlap, maximising screen use. Window manager features are accessible from the keyboard: a mouse is optional. xmonad is written, configured and extensible in Haskell. Custom layout algorithms, key bindings and other extensions may be written by the user in config files. Layouts are applied dynamically, and different layouts may be used on each workspace. Xinerama is fully supported, allowing windows to be tiled on several physical screens.

This repository contains the xmonad package, a minimal, stable, yet extensible core. It is accompanied by xmonad-contrib, a library of hundreds of additional community-maintained tiling algorithms and extension modules. The two combined make for a powerful X11 window-manager with endless customization possibilities. They are, quite literally, libraries for creating your own window manager.

Installation

For installation and configuration instructions, please see:

If you run into any trouble, consult our documentation or ask the community for help.

Contributing

We welcome all forms of contributions:

Please do read the CONTRIBUTING document for more information about bug reporting and code contributions. For a brief overview of the architecture and code conventions, see the documentation for the XMonad.Doc.Developing module. If in doubt, talk to us.

Authors

Started in 2007 by Spencer Janssen, Don Stewart and Jason Creighton, the XMonad project lives on thanks to new generations of maintainers and dozens of contributors.

Description
The core of xmonad, a small but functional ICCCM-compliant tiling window manager
Readme BSD-3-Clause 6.2 MiB
Languages
Haskell 97.6%
Nix 2%
Shell 0.4%