That would be
Charlie Calvert's Community Convergence. A great list of links related to C#, LINQ, F#, PFX, etc.
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Here is a link to my .NET Developers Journal article that I mentioned
here.
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For those of you interested in F# or grid computing, check out my article in the May issue of .NET Developers Journal. The article, starting on page 18, describes the process of grid enabling an application written in F#, a new meta programming language developed by Microsoft Research. Using an example of Pi calculation to the nth digit, the article demonstrates the parallel processing of an algorithm discovered by Fabrice Bellard. Alchemi, an open-source.NET framework, is used as the grid computing platform. Also discussed in the article are some of the differences between F# and C# as well as their corresponding reasons.
7/12/09: Updated links
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Interested in F#? NO! Not the same as G flat! F# is a pragmatically-oriented variant of ML that shares a core language with OCaml. F# programs run on top of the .NET Framework. Unlike other scripting languages it executes at or near the speed of C# and C++, making use of the performance that comes through strong typing. Unlike many statically-typed languages it also supports many dynamic language techniques, such as property discovery and reflection where needed. F# includes extensions for working across languages and for object-oriented programming, and it works seamlessly with other .NET programming languages and tools.
Now are you interested? Head on over to “the Hub” - THE place for F#! Founded by optionsScalper, the Hub is a great place for F# Articles, blogs, forums, code, galleries, etc.
7/12/09: Link updates
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optionsScalper has been pushing F# really hard! I say oS should go into sales! I'm looking forward to his presentation next week at the .
NET Users Group, but being as busy as I am, I have to agree with
Damon.
Speaking of stack size optionsScalper was telling me about F# and how .... look, a penny!
LOL!!
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