This is a recommended path for learning Haskell based on experience helping others. A list of recommendations from one of the authors of the Haskell Book.
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Get Stack to get GHC installed and to build your projects.
If you don't know anything about Stack and would like an overview, check out this comprehensive Stack video tutorial.
Instead of following the instructions on Haskell.org, get Stack.
https://mail.haskell.org/pipermail/haskell-community/2015-September/000014.html
The core recommendation is to read the lectures and complete all exercises/homework for the Spring 13 version of cis194 followed by the NICTA course. Both are linked below. Everything else can be considered optional and is mentioned so you know where to look.
@dmvianna wanted me to let you know that these are just the free recommended resources. If you're willing to check out a book, we heartily recommend our own Haskell Book! That book replaces all of the primary resources recommended here.
Do this first, this is the primary way we recommend being introduced to Haskell.
Available online.
Brent Yorgey's course is the best I've found so far. This course is valuable as it will not only equip you to write basic Haskell but also help you to understand parser combinators.
The only reason you shouldn't start with cis194 is if you are not a programmer or are an inexperienced one. If that's the case, start with Thompson's book and transition to cis194.
This is the course we recommend doing after Yorgey's cis194 course
Available on github here.
This will reinforce and give you experience directly implementing the abstractions introduced in cis194, this is practice which is critical to becoming comfortable with everyday uses of Functor/Applicative/Monad/etc. in Haskell. Doing cis194 and then the NICTA course represents the core recommendation of my guide and is how we teach everyone Haskell.
Provides more material on intermediate topics
cs240h is available online.
This is Bryan O'Sullivan's online course from the class he teaches at Stanford. If you don't know who he is, take a gander at half the libraries any Haskell application ends up needing and his name is on it. Of particular note if you've already done the Yorgey course are the modules on phantom types, information flow control, language extensions, concurrency, pipes, and lenses.
These resources are not vetted or tested with learners as cis194 and NICTA course have been, but they're linked in the topic listing so you have ideas on where to begin. This includes things like intermediate/advanced concepts and subjects like tooling and text editors.
Hosted in this repository here.
These are actually pretty important and helpful. Look here for deep dives on a variety of topics.