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Home/ Questions/Q 618461
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T18:32:53+00:00 2026-05-13T18:32:53+00:00

I’m hoping to use either Haskell or OCaml on a new project because R

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I’m hoping to use either Haskell or OCaml on a new project because R is too slow. I need to be able to use support vectory machines, ideally separating out each execution to run in parallel. I want to use a functional language and I have the feeling that these two are the best so far as performance and elegance are concerned (I like Clojure, but it wasn’t as fast in a short test). I am leaning towards OCaml because there appears to be more support for integration with other languages so it could be a better fit in the long run (e.g. OCaml-R).

Does anyone know of a good tutorial for this kind of analysis, or a code example, in either Haskell or OCaml?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T18:32:54+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:32 pm

    Hal Daume has written several major machine learning algorithms during his Ph.D. (now he is an assistant professor and rising star in machine learning community)

    On his web page, there are a SVM, a simple decision tree and a logistic regression all in OCaml. By reading these code, you can have a feeling how machine learning models are implemented in OCaml.

    Another good example of writing basic machine learning models is Owl library for scientific and numeric computations in OCaml.

    I’d also like to mention F#, a new .Net language similar to OCaml. Here’s a factor graph model written in F# analyzing Chess play data. This research also has a NIPS publication.

    While FP is suitable for implementing machine learning and data mining models. But what you can get here most is NOT performance. It is right that FP supports parallel computing better than imperative languages, like C# or Java. But implementing a parallel SVM, or decision tree, has very little relation to do with the language! Parallel is parallel. The numerical optimizations behind machine learning and data mining are usually imperative, writing them pure-functionally is usually hard and less efficient. Making these sophisticated algorithms parallel is very hard task in the algorithm level, not in the language level. If you want to run 100 SVM in parallel, FP helps here. But I don’t see the difficulty running 100 libsvm parallel in C++, not to consider that the single thread libsvm is more efficient than a not-well-tested haskell svm package.

    Then what do FP languages, like F#, OCaml, Haskell, give?

    1. Easy to test your code. FP languages usually have a top-level interpreter, you can test your functions on the fly.

    2. Few mutable states. This means that passing the same parameter to a function, this function always gives the same result, thus debugging is easy in FPs.

    3. Code is succinct. Type inference, pattern matching, closures, etc. You focus more on the domain logic, and less on the language part. So when you write the code, your mind is mainly thinking about the programming logic itself.

    4. Writing code in FPs is fun.

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