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Based on The F# Component Design Guidelines, F# should use PascalCase to conform .NET Framework naming conventions.

Suppose I'm using C# or VB.NET and want to import a F# library, when should I expect a camelCase convention to appear in this library?

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    not sure why you are asking, if everything uses PascalCase, then never? Apr 3, 2017 at 4:41
  • This will depend on whoever (how) wrote that particular library, however you should expect functions and other values (defined with let) appear with camelCase. These are usually public.
    – s952163
    Apr 3, 2017 at 4:49

1 Answer 1

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Take a look at the FsCheck library, and specifically its Gen module. (There are other examples in the FsCheck source code, but this one's easy to read). FsCheck is designed to be used from both F# and C#, and the design of the Gen module reflects that:

module Gen =
    // ...

    [<CompiledName("Map"); EditorBrowsable(EditorBrowsableState.Never)>]
    let map f (gen:Gen<_>) = gen.Map f

    [<CompiledName("Sized"); EditorBrowsable(EditorBrowsableState.Never)>]
    let sized fgen = Gen (fun n r -> let (Gen m) = fgen n in m n r)

    [<CompiledName("Sized"); CompilerMessage("This method is not intended for use from F#.", 10001, IsHidden=true, IsError=false)>]
    let sizedFunc (sizedGen : Func<int,Gen<_>>) =
        sized sizedGen.Invoke

Ignore the implementation of these functions for a moment and look at their names, and the CompiledName attribute that each has been given. When you invoke the map function from F#, you'll invoke it as Gen.map, but when you use it from C#, the CompiledName attribute will cause you to see it with the name Gen.Map. Likewise with the sized function, which will be called Gen.sized when invoked from F# code, which will be seen with the name Gen.Sized when invoked from C#. Note also how there's a second function with the same CompiledName (when seen from C#), but the F# code has a distinction between Gen.sized and Gen.sizedFunc (and the F# compiler will also warn you if you try to use Gen.sizedFunc that "This method is not intended for use from F#"), because that overload expects the function type used by C# code, and is purely for the convenience of C# coders using the library. (F# functions use the FSharpFunc type, which behaves differently from the C# Func type in some situations).

However, your question wasn't so much "How should I write my F# library so that it can be used by C# coders?". Rather, your question was, "As a C# coder, what should I expect from F# libraries in terms of naming conventions?" And the answer to that question is: It depends on the library you're using.

As you've pointed out, the F# Component Design Guidelines recommend PascalCase names for functions designed to be used from calling code. And FsCheck is a good example of a library that did it right. But not all libraries were written with the intent that they be easily used from C#. Some libraries were written thinking only about other F# code using them, and those libraries will not necessarily conform to the design guidelines, because the F# convention is to use camelCase for function names.

So although this isn't a totally satisfactory answer, it's the best one I can give you, because I don't know which libraries you'll be using.

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