bryanhunter / fsharpy

Access F# interactive (FSI) from Elixir

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fsharpy

Access F# interactive (FSI) from Elixir.

Getting started

FSharpy requires that either fsi.exe (on Windows) or fsharpi (On Mac or Linux) is installed and in your path.

Add Fsharpy to your mix dependencies.

Usage from IEX

To start an Fsharpy session...

iex> {:ok, p} = Fsharpy.start_ink
{:ok, #PID<0.142.0>}

Once an Fsharpy session has been started, you can use the print function to send code to be evaluated in F# and have the results printed to IEX.

iex> Fsharpy.print p, "let x = 21 * 2"

F#: val x : int = 42
:ok

iex> Fsharpy.print p, "#help"

F#: F# Interactive directives:
F#:
F#:     #r "file.dll";;        Reference (dynamically load) the given DLL
F#:     #I "path";;            Add the given search path for referenced DLLs
F#:     #load "file.fs" ...;;  Load the given file(s) as if compiled and referenced
F#:     #time ["on"|"off"];;   Toggle timing on/off
F#:     #help;;                Display help
F#:     #quit;;                Exit
F#:
F#:   F# Interactive command line options:
F#:
F#:       See 'fsharpi --help' for options
:ok

To evaluate F# code and get results that can be used programatically in Elixir you can use the eval function

iex> Fsharpy.eval p, "let x = 10"
[%{"x" => 10}]

iex> Fsharpy.eval p, "let y = x + 5"
[%{"y" => 15}]

iex> [map] = Fsharpy.eval p, "[1;2;3;4;5] |> List.map(fun n -> n * x)"
[%{"it" => [10, 20, 30, 40, 50]}]

iex> map["it"] |> Enum.reverse
[50, 40, 30, 20, 10]

To shut down the Fsharpy session

iex>  Fsharpy.quit p
:ok

About

Access F# interactive (FSI) from Elixir

License:MIT License


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