Comment by dnnddidiej

14 hours ago

I think you have to get a Haskell job early in career and stick to Haskell jobs. Breaking in is really hard as you come without experience there will be plenty of others with Haskell experience to compete. And because the jobs are rare if it doesnt work out (company becomes bad to work for or layoff) you can be unstuck (or I guess you would switch to Rust, Scala or F#)

As somebody who has helped hire many Haskell devs, I can say that lots of Haskell experience isn't always a positive. We have to filter carefully to make sure that we end up with developers who want to build real things, not developers who just want to get paid for noodling around with Haskell. As far as I'm concerned, I'd much rather hire somebody with lots of experience building things who ended up coming to Haskell later because they viscerally understand the benefits and risks. Somebody with lots and lots of Haskell experience who never delivered much is a big risk.

  • haha i've abused this recruiting mindset for a decade

    it's so easy to scout when a company has this haskell philosophy. either by the interviewers themselves or by the bloggers they hired to guide their team.

    the trick? i just..lie. "oh yeah i'm super pragmatic. i'm not hardline about haskell. i don't think you should be fancy." see how easy it is? i am suddenly hired and got a fat raise. and if the company moves off haskell? i quit immediately, get another haskell job, and talk to my former coworkers on the way out to embolden them to do the same.

    it helps that i have the "real world" stuff on my resume.

    i rode the 2010s job hopping ride as a haskeller doing this. each time a 20-30% raise. and i get to still write haskell. and i am always a top percentile haskeller at the company so i can code however tf i want lolol. suddenly - singletons, Generics, HKD!

    so here's to earning another million bucks "noodling around with Haskell" :cheers:

    • So you've....worked hard. Understood the language and social landscape. Delivered what your employers wanted. And earned lots of money.

      Congrats I guess? Not sure where the abuse/guilt comes from.

This happened to me.

I've made all my money over a decade in Haskell. Millions. Paid for all my stuff.

It all started with a recruiter on LinkedIn

My fear with something like Haskell particularly and with hiring people who really love Haskell is that you risk ending up with a certain kind of personality who fetishizes the tool over the problem.

I've been this person, and I've worked with this kind of person, and been the victim of this kind of person. They love language X, or framework Y, and are convinced that so many problems in front of them are shaped in a way that would be solved through the application of it.

They now have a hammer and they go searching for nails to hit with it.

I've been in shops that used Haskell, and it was... fine? It's I guess nice for people who enjoy writing in it -- I prefer other FP languages personally. I like nerdy things like that and used to hang out on Lambda the Ultimate or whatever. But I don't think there's any real secret powers in Haskell or most other tools. I've been burned too many times by that kind of approach.