Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

February 3, 2013

Need to discover, access, analyze and visualize big and broad data? Try F#.

Filed under: Data Analysis,Data Mining,F#,Microsoft — Patrick Durusau @ 6:58 pm

Need to discover, access, analyze and visualize big and broad data? Try F#. by Oliver Bloch.

From the post:

Microsoft Research just released a new iteration of Try F#, a set of tools designed to make it easy for anyone – not just developers – to learn F# and take advantage of its big data, cross-platform capabilities.

F# is the open-source, cross-platform programming language invented by Don Syme and his team at Microsoft Research to help reduce the time-to-deployment for analytical software components in the modern enterprise.

Big data definitively is big these days and we are excited about this new iteration of Try F#. Regardless of your favorite language, or if you’re on a Mac, a Windows PC, Linux or Android, if you need to deal with complex problems, you will want to take a look at F#!

Kerry Godes from Microsoft’s Openness Initiative connected with Evelyne Viegas, Director of Semantic Computing at Microsoft Research, to find out more about how you can use “Try F# to seamlessly discover, access, analyze and visualize big and broad data.” For the complete interview, go to the Openness blog or check out www.tryfsharp.org to get started “writing simple code for complex problems”.

Are you an F# user?

Curious how F# compares to other languages for “complexity?”

Visualization gurus: Does the complexity of languages go up or down with the complexity of licensing terms?

Inquiring minds want to know. 😉

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