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Soma on F#

Soma announced some exciting news this morning. Developer Division--the people at Microsoft who make Visual Studio--is partnering with Microsoft Research on F#. We're going to fully integrate F# into Visual Studio:

“This is one of the best things that has happened at Microsoft ever since we created Microsoft Research over 15 years ago.  Here is another great example of technology transfer at work.  We will be partnering with Don Syme and others in Microsoft Research to fully integrate the F# language into Visual Studio and continue innovating and evolving F#.”

Don Syme and his team work out of Cambridge. Over the past few weeks we've been busily spinning up a team in Redmond to work with them. As its stands today, the team looks like this:

Cambridge: Don Syme (does everything), James Margetson (development) and Ralf Herbrich (development)

Redmond: Luke Hoban (PM), Me (development)

Of course we'll add more people over the next weeks and months. Critically, we still need to build the test organization.

The C# Product Unit is sponsoring the partnership and for the foreseeable future Luke and I will continue to work in the C# organization. I think this is a strong match because the C# org, as you probably expect, has a deep relationship with the other parts of Microsoft that will be important going forward: Parallel Fx (PFx), the CLR team, and so forth. We also have Anders Hejlsberg.

F# is a language that makes it easy to make beautiful, concise code. I'm excited to be part of getting it into people's hands.

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2007
    PingBack from http://www.artofbam.com/wordpress/?p=9693

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2007
    微软Developer Division部负责人 Somasegar 在自己的 blog 上发布了一条关于 F# 产品化的 消息,而Jomo Fisher的另一篇 blog 则披露了更多的 内容。

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2007
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2007
    Congrats on the new project/position! :)

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2007
    Visual Haskell?  Erik Meijer's already involved with VB.  Perhaps VB will just become Haskell :)

  • Anonymous
    October 23, 2007
    Excellent news - any hints what project templates (ASP.NET / WinForms, etc) you are hoping to ship or whether you also look to release an Express edition. Congrats.