Progressive .NET Tutorials 2012 / Practical Functional-first Programming with F#

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Description

n this Practical Functional-first Programming with F# tutorial, Don Syme introduces you to the practical application of F#/.NET programming to solve real-world analytical programming problems. The tutorial will begin with a short lecture introducing the core value proposition of F# - robust, efficient, type-safe, succinct analytical programming which can be deployed in the enterprise context. You’ll then progress through a series of worked examples for learning functional and OO programming in F#, including the F# Koans, samples for interactive charting and some introductory algortihms. You’ll also learn how to use F# with partner technologies such as C#, math/statistics libraries, databases, REST services, ASP.NET, Azure, client-side Javascript and OData.

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Don Syme (don.syme)

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Don Syme is the inventor of F#. Since joining Microsoft Research in 1998, he’s been a seminal contributor to a wide variety of leading-edge projects, including generics in C# and the .NET Common Language Runtime. He received a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory in 1999.

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on 3/10/2017 7:20 AM
It’s been some time since I blogged regularly.  Here’s why I got a Twitter account, and use it all the time for technical communication The Visual F# Tools Blog and then the .NET blog are major ways of communication about F# work at Microsoft Just about e[...]
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on 7/22/2016 3:02 AM
I’m pleased to report that our paper Types from data: Making structured data first-class citizens in F# won a Distinguished Paper award at PLDI 2016 in Santa Barbara. The paper also has a page on Tomas Petricek’s blog.       The .NET and Managed Languages[...]
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on 10/23/2015 4:45 AM
[ The opinions here are entirely my own etc etc. ] Dear World, With regard to this InfoQ article…  I’ve said this a few times before, but please use the terminology “Visual F#” or “The Visual F# Tools” when talking about F# at Microsoft. And somehow make [...]
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on 10/22/2015 9:45 PM
[ The opinions here are entirely my own etc etc. ] Dear World, With regard to this InfoQ article…  I’ve said this a few times before, but please use the terminology “Visual F#” or “The F# Tools for Visual Studio” when talking about F# at Microsoft. And so[...]
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on 1/8/2015 7:43 AM
Microsoft Research is looking for development engineers in Cambridge, UK!  Applications now open! Microsoft Research has been working in Cambridge for 17 years to advance the state of the art in Computer Science and to feed the best of technology into Mic[...]
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