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Why F#?

(batsov.com)
438 points bozhidar | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.229s | source
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rockyj ◴[] No.43546371[source]
I did try F#, but I was new to .NET ecosystem. For 1 "hello world" I was quite surprised by how many project files and boilerplate was generated by .NET, which put me off.

I am all for FP, immutable, and modern languages. But then where are the jobs and which companies care if you write good code?

Now everyone wants languages which are easy to use with AI, while reducing workforce and "increased productivity". I have been programming for 20 years and know 4-5 languages, in India it was worse but in EU at-least I can make a sustainable living by writing Java / TypeScript. I cannot even find jobs with Kotlin + TypeScript which pay well, forget getting jobs in Elixir / Clojure / F# (there maybe a handful of opportunities if I will relocate for around 70K/year). That is why I have mostly given up on learning niche languages.

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1. afavour ◴[] No.43546629[source]
Opportunities do exist, even when they’re few and far between. I learned Rust in my spare time because I was really interested in it. Then we stumbled across something that would have really benefitted from a cross platform library and lo and behold, I got to use my Rust knowledge, even though the vast majority of my day job doesn’t use it.