I am trying to use Akka.NET for F# in VSCode using this example I found on the internet.
Code
// ActorSayHello.fsx
#time "on"
// #load "Boot
Since you are using a script file it doesn't contain any project reference. Instead you can use nuget references directly from the script!
#r "nuget: Akka.FSharp"
#r "nuget: Akka.TestKit"
Another caveat that might occur is that F# interactive needs a --langversion:preview flag to be able to use nuget references. Setting "FSharp.fsiExtraParameters": ["--langversion:preview"] in the VSCode settings.json did the trick for me.
And the last bit that I had to change to make it compile was to replace system.Shutdown() with system.Terminate() because Shutdown method was deprecated and removed.
Here is the full listing with changes mentioned above:
// ActorSayHello.fsx
#time "on"
#r "nuget: Akka.FSharp"
#r "nuget: Akka.TestKit"
// #load "Bootstrap.fsx"
open System
open Akka.Actor
open Akka.Configuration
open Akka.FSharp
open Akka.TestKit
// #Using Actor
// Actors are one of Akka's concurrent models.
// An Actor is a like a thread instance with a mailbox.
// It can be created with system.ActorOf: use receive to get a message, and printfn "Hello %s" msg
| _ -> failwith "unknown message"
let echoServer = system.ActorOf(Props(typedefof, Array.empty))
echoServer
And the result looks like this on my machine:
Real: 00:00:00.000, ЦП: 00:00:00.000, GC gen0: 0, gen1: 0, gen2: 0
namespace FSI_0012.Project
Hello F#!
Real: 00:00:00.007, ЦП: 00:00:00.000, GC gen0: 1, gen1: 0, gen2: 0
val system : ActorSystem = akka://FSharp
type EchoServer =
class
inherit Actor
override OnReceive : message:obj -> unit
end
val echoServer : IActorRef = [akka://FSharp/user/$a#989929929]
val it : Threading.Tasks.Task