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  • Pattern Matching in .NET 4

    Pattern matching may seem like an alien concept to developers who focus on C# and VB style languages, but it shouldn’t be. Ultimately it is just a refinement of the case statement, which itself is a refinement of if-else-if blocks. This piece takes a brief look at that transition and how F#’s pattern matching can be applied to VB and C#.

  • Latest F# Breaks Binary Compatibility

    Microsoft has included F# in VS 2010 Beta 1 and has released a corresponding CTP update for VS 2008. The latest binaries, version 1.9.6.16, are not compatible with previous ones, v. 1.9.6.2, meaning all previous code needs to be recompiled.

  • Interview: Don Syme Answering Questions on F#, C#, Haskell and Scala

    In this interview made by InfoQ’s Sadek Drobi, Don Syme, a Senior Researcher at Microsoft Research, answers questions mostly on F#, but also on functional programming, C# generics, type classes in Haskell, similarities between F# and Scala.

  • Interview: Lennart Augustsson on DSLs Written in Haskell

    In this interview filmed at QCon SF 2008, Lennart Augustsson talks about writing DSLs in Haskell, presenting the advantages offered by the language. In that context, he talks about embedded DSLs, static and dynamic languages, syntax and semantics, monads and many other related topics.

  • Programming Languages: 2008 Review and Prospects for 2009

    In the beginning of last year, Ehud Lamm launched on Lamba the Ultimate a thread about programming languages predictions for 2008. Several subjects popped up: concurrency, functional programming, future of Java, Ruby, C++, and many others… What really happened in 2008 and what are the prospects for 2009? Bloggers have addressed these questions on demand of James Iry, echoing at last year thread.

  • Financial Functions for .NET

    Luca Bolognese has reimplemented Excel’s collection of financial functions in F#. Released under an open source license, it should prove useful for both learning F# and for porting applications from Excel to .NET.

  • It's Official: Visual Studio 2010 Will Ship with F#

    Back in 2007 it was revealed that F# would become a first class language on the .NET platform at some point in the future. Last night it was announced that F# will be included in the Visual Studio 2010 release.

  • F# September 2008 CTP Was Updated

    Shortly after it was released, the F# September 2008 CTP has been updated. This is a minor update, which is supposed to address some issues left open in the CTP released a week ago. "Support for units of measure on decimal types was limited in the first CTP release, and this has now been addressed", according to Don Syme, a researcher on the F# team.

  • F# Update: MonoDevelop, a New Book, and a New CTP

    Though still officially just a research project, the excitement over F# continues unabated. In today's roundup, we take a brief look at what's new for F#.

  • F# 1.9.4 Available Now with Important Updates

    Microsoft released an new version of its F# compiler, version 1.9.4. A version more polished and simplified.

  • F#: What to Expect from It in the Near Future?

    In recent posts, Brian McNamara and Don Syme, of the F# research team, have shed some light on their plans for the near future.

  • Article: Asynchronous Workflows in F#

    In this third installment, Robert Pickering continues the conversation on F# and this time focuses on Asynchronous Workflows and the resulting performance gains obtained when used.

  • WPF and F#

    Yesterday we told you about using PHP.NET with Silverlight. The GUI framework for Silverlight, WPF, represents the future of Windows development. So it is understandable that F# developers would be looking at it with a keen eye as well.

  • Robert Pickering on F# Workflows

    In this second InfoQ exclusive article, Robert Pickering continues the conversation diving deep into how workflows work in F#. Workflows in F# provide the building blocks for library implementors to create DSLs.

  • Article: Beyond Foundations of F#

    Since Robert Pickering published Foundations of F# in May, the language has grown significantly. Besides adding a host of new features, it is being moved from a research project to a fully supported, production-grade release. We asked Robert to discuss some of the new features in F#.

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