Nothing against F# but the developer ecosystem around C# is just plain better, especially if you're already a dotnet shop. Documentation, code examples, tooling, developers who already know the language, etc.
F# doesn't really buy you anything if you're already invested in C# (or even VB.net for those poor souls) unless you have a very specific use-case for it, IMO.
F# doesn't really buy you anything if you're already invested in C# (or even VB.net for those poor souls) unless you have a very specific use-case for it, IMO.