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FsharpConf: Virtual F# conference live [video] (msdn.com)
29 points by tpetricek on March 4, 2016 | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments



I was excited about this until I saw it's from jet.com. Heard too many things about bad dev practices there to believe a conference presentation about it.

It's unfortunate there aren't more F# jobs. I've always worked exclusively with Linux, but would switch to MS and all associated headaches in a second if I could write functional code with F#.


It's unfortunate there aren't more F# jobs.

I've found that several C# shops are open to using F# where it makes sense. If you see an interesting job opening and they mention C# it's definitely worth asking about F#.


Every C# shop right now is a potential F# shop in the future.

They only need to see why, in many cases, C# is totally wrong for the problems they are trying to solve :)


> I've always worked exclusively with Linux, but would switch to MS and all associated headaches in a second if I could write functional code with F#.

That seems... odd. Surely you can write functional code in a different language on Linux? Or write F# on Mono?


Sorry if I wasn't clear ... I do write Haskell on Linux.

I meant that F# would be enough to entice me away from Linux and overcome my activation barrier against using Windows. As long as it wasn't glorified C# with a thin functional wrapper, and it was a focus on real functional techniques, it would be highly interesting for me.


I do not have much of any F# experience but I write C# in my day job. I've heard nothing but good things about F#, including from people similar to you with a functional background incl. Haskell.


Soon .net core, they're making good progress on the CoreCLR support.


It is one presentation from jet.com employee (who is cool in my opinion). There are multiple presentations from different organizations/people.

Also F# on Linux works like charm on Mono and CoreCLR support is around the corner.


There are a lot of cool engineers with cool presentations. You can't watch them all, and filtering by properties of the company backing the work can sometimes be a useful way to find only the things more relevant for you.

> Also F# on Linux works like charm

Yes, my only current knowledge of F# comes from working through tutorials on my Ubuntu laptop.

My comment was meant to suggest that F# makes it worthwhile to endure the pains of working in a Windows environment. I love Python, for instance, but would not consider a job coding Python from Windows. For F#, I would consider it.


What sort of bad dev practices have you heard about?




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