Haskell Book Recommendations

I don't mean to derail the thread, but what are the most used functional programming languages in the industry? Purely functional, no "javascript is actchually part functional" please

usi-pl.github.io/lc/sp-2015/doc/Bird_Wadler. Introduction to Functional Programming.1ed.pdf

thank me later

There are no good Haskell books except for Real World Haskell, which is now sorely outdated.
Learn You A Haskell is incredibly shit.

also this

haskell.org/tutorial/haskell-98-tutorial.pdf

and then this

learnyouahaskell.com/introduction

F# is used a lot in some sectors, particularly in financial services
It's a functional programming language with an ML flavour
However it isn't a pure functional language like Haskell, you can use some wacky escape hatches to do ugly nonfunctional things if you want.

Other than that, there's some languages that heavily lean on functional elements, such as Scala and Erlang.

LYAH fucking suck diiiiiiiiicks stop recommending it you ******s

These are good ones
These are outdated/awful

brainlet

Hudak is an exceptionally good writer. Richard Bird is another good one. then comes Hutton, his videos on Youtube are cool

fuck, fucking degenerates and idiots everywhere.

So you are recommending an outdated website and a language reference two decades old? Do you even program in haskell or are you just a moron?

Funny isn't it
*sips Monster Energy Philosophy Ultra*
The purest language attracting the impurest people...