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The stack new command

stack new PACKAGE_NAME [--bare] [--[no-]init] [TEMPLATE_NAME]
          [-p|--param KEY:VALUE] [DIR(S)] [--omit-packages] [--force]
          [--ignore-subdirs]

stack new creates a new project using a project template.

By default:

  • the project is created in a new directory named after the package. Pass the --bare flag to create the project in the current directory;

  • the project is initialised for use with Stack. Pass the --no-init flag to skip such initialisation; and

  • the project template is the one specified by the default-template option.

A package name acceptable to Cabal comprises an alphanumeric 'word'; or two or more such words, with the words separated by a hyphen/minus character (-). A word cannot be comprised only of the characters 0 to 9.

An alphanumeric character is one in one of the Unicode Letter categories (Lu (uppercase), Ll (lowercase), Lt (titlecase), Lm (modifier), or Lo (other)) or Number categories (Nd (decimal), Nl (letter), or No (other)).

Note

In the case of Hackage and acceptable package names, an alphanumeric character is limited to one of A to Z, a to z, and 0 to 9.

Note

The name of a project is not constrained to be an acceptable package name. A single-package project can be renamed to differ from the name of its package.

The --param <key>:<value> option specifies a key-value pair to populate a key in a template. The option can be specified multiple times.

The arguments specifying directories and the --ignore-subdirs, --force and --omit-packages flags are as for the stack init command. These arguments are ignored if the --no-init flag is passed.

If a snapshot is specified at the command line and the project is initialised for use with Stack, stack new will try to use it. For further information, see the documentation for the --snapshot and --resolver options.

Project templates

A project template file can be located in a repository named stack-templates on GitHub, GitLab or Bitbucket; at a URL; or on the local file system.

Project template file names have the extension .hsfiles. The extension does not need to be specified with stack new.

A project template file my-template.hsfiles in a repository username/stack-templates on GitHub, GitLab or Bitbucket can be specified with stack new as:

<service>:username/my-template

where <service> is one of github for GitHub, gitlab for GitLab, or bitbucket for Bitbucket.

The default service is GitHub, the default username is commercialhaskell and the default project template name is new-template.

Examples

Create a project for package my-project in new directory my-project with the default project template file and initialise it for use with Stack:

stack new my-project

Create a project for package my-package in the current directory with the default project template file and initialise it for use with Stack:

stack new my-package --bare

Create a project with the rio project template at the default repository and initialise it for use with Stack:

stack new my-project rio

Create a project with the mysql project template provided by the yesodweb/stack-templates repository on GitHub and initialise it for use with Stack:

stack new my-project yesodweb/mysql

Create a project with the my-template project template provided by the username/stack-templates repository on Bitbucket and initialise it for use with Stack:

stack new my-project bitbucket:username/my-template

Create a project with the my-template.hsfiles project template file at https://example.com and initialise it for use with Stack:

stack new my-project https://example.com/my-template

Create a project with the local project template file <path_to_template>/my-template.hsfiles and initialise it for use with Stack:

stack new my-project <path_to_template_file>/my-template

Create a project with the simple project template file at the default repository (which does not use Hpack and a package.yaml file) and do not initialise it for use with Stack (stack init could be used subsequently):

stack new my-project --no-init simple