Many standard F# libraries and tools, including the compiler itself, are developed as open-source and have a large number of contributors. To successfully build such projects, you need to be serious about your craft. This includes comprehensive testing, using automated build tools, continuous integration, as well as creating great documentation and tutorials. In this talk, I'll speak about what I learned as an open-source F# contributor.
Along the way, we'll also look at a number of risk-free ways of introducing F# into your workflow:
* How to use F# Interactive for explorative programming and writing code that works on the first try
* Using FAKE - an F# build tool - to automate everything in your build process
* Writing readable unit tests with F# and using FsCheck for property-based testing
* Generating great documentation using F# Formatting tools
In summary, this talk is a walkthrough covering some of the software engineering aspects of programming that have been working extremely well for the F# open-source ecosystem. After the talk, you'll have a good idea how to use some of the techniques in your daily job - but you may as well become an F# contributor!