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Ars Technica Tours Mono

Kevin Francis writes "Over the coming weeks, Ars Technica will be taking a look at Mono, including a basic introduction to Mono, MonoDevelop, and C#, and then branching out to GTK#, database access, ASP.NET, advanced C# topics, and conclude with a discussion of the future of Mono, and the C# standard. All the examples will work on Windows and Linux, with OSX support coming shortly. Part 1 of the series is online now."

23 of 465 comments (clear)

  1. looks promissing but what is it really against? by urbieta · · Score: 4, Informative

    Time for coders to take a closer look!

    What are the methods currently used by GIMP, OpenOffice, Mozilla among others that already support multiple OS's?

    Maybe Ill start learning coding with this and kill more birds with the same shot :)

    1. Re:looks promissing but what is it really against? by FooBarWidget · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't know about OpenOffice and Mozilla but your claims are definitely not true for Gimp.

      First of all, Gimp is not C++, it's written in C. And Gimp contains very little to no platform-specific code. Gimp uses Gtk and Glib as portability layers. The Gimp maintainer strives to have as little platform-specific code as possible. He even wants to eventually get rid of all of the remaining little #ifdefs.

      Gtk and Glib are also not littered with #ifdefs. Gtk uses Gdk as portability layer. Gdk has several implementations: X, Win32 GDI, DirectFB, etc. An implementation is automatically chosen by the configure script (or something like that, not really sure about this one), but there are very little #ifdefs.
      I don't know about Glib.

      "The theory is that with .NET you won't need ANY platform specfic code. If that turns out true, I will be completely amazed."

      My theory is that it will end up with something like Java or all the other portability frameworks for C/C++. The simple things are portable but when you want to do some more complex things, you suddenly face the limitations. And you also have limited ways to really integrate with the platform's desktop.

  2. Re:Will the coders use it though? by Random+Web+Developer · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am writing an app for mono that is supposed to run on linux mac and windows in the end. From what I see it's nowhere near just starting a .NET app on linux using mono.

    The app clearly has to be written with crossplatform execution in mind. (I know this goes for c and java too, but some people seem to think they will run office on mono in the future.).
    You need to steer clear of anything that depends on a platform.
    - if you define a path, make sure you use path.combine or path.directoryseparatorchar instead of a / of \.
    - don't depend on environment variables
    - pay attention to casing, don't say "file.ext" when it's "File.ext"

    I know it should be ovbious to any cross platform dev out there, but I just thought I'd bust some bubbles with some of the less informed.

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  3. Re:Libraries by ajp · · Score: 5, Informative

    Uninformed slashdotters with tin foil hats should click this link.
    ECMA-335 Common Language Infrastructure (of which .NET, Rotor and Mono are implementations.)

  4. Re:RAD tools by Lussarn · · Score: 4, Informative

    Glade is language independant. As long as there is libglade for mono it should work very well.

  5. Re:RAD tools by Random+Web+Developer · · Score: 2, Informative

    It does pretty much everything except for the gui designer (and a debugger or help system if it's not built correctly).

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  6. Re:blech! by turgid · · Score: 3, Informative
    Since when does imposing Windows conventions everywhere by force equal "cross platform compatability?"

    We have Open Standards and Open Source for that sort of thing already.

    We also have Java for the write-once-run-anywhere thing. I fail to believe that .NET/Mono/.GNU will be better or solve any new problems that have not already been solved.

    There's even an official Windows port ofn Java, so I'm told...

  7. Re:Bull by cbiffle · · Score: 5, Informative

    And, of course, there's the fact that his latter two complaints are kind of sort of fixed in 1.5.

    So... :-)

    Personally, I think the C# folks make too much of a big deal about the mandatory exception handling in Java. Heard a fellow from Microsoft say "Frequently, Java folks just put an empty catch() block to catch the exception they know won't happen, so why make it mandatory?"

    I've got bad news for you. I find situations like that about once a week when auditing my programmers' code, and it's almost always a situation that -can- happen, but the programmer couldn't see it.

    Don't trust the programmer. I know, I am one. :-)

  8. Re:And how is this better than wxWidgets/wxPython? by De · · Score: 2, Informative

    You're of course welcome to use wxNet (wx's C# bindings) instead of GTK#. Mono doesn't force you to use a toolkit, they just make it easy to use GTK#.

  9. Re:RAD tools by Oxy+the+moron · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is important to remember, though, that if you use GLADE you should have it set to Gtk+/Gtk/Gtk#. If you have it set to GLADE, I don't believe it will work in Windows (yet) due to lack of library support.

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  10. Re:Will the coders use it though? by moonbender · · Score: 5, Informative
    How is this different from Java? In my opinion Java makes things harder than it needs to be. For starters, enforced exception handling can't auto-box/unbox primitive types and doesn't support arbitrary length parameter lists String.Format() style.

    Right. Of course that's all about to change - from the Java 1.5 ("5") new features site:
    Autoboxing/Unboxing
    This facility eliminates the drudgery of manual conversion between primitive types (such as int) and wrapper types (such as Integer). Refer to JSR 201.
    Varargs
    This facility eliminates the need for manually boxing up argument lists into an array when invoking methods that accept variable-length argument lists. Refer to JSR 201.
    You still need to deal with exceptions - that's a bad thing?
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  11. it's not either/or by dekeji · · Score: 2, Informative

    Mono isn't all about cross-platform development, it's about giving you a more modern general purpose programming language than C/C++ and providing lots of useful bindings for it. Some of those bindings happen to be cross-platform, others don't. You really just get a choice.

    As languages, C# and Python are simply different. Both have their uses, and neither is better. C#, for example, lets you do pointer manipulation and its implementations are efficient enough even for writing low-level loops. Also, people find C#'s static type checking useful for long-lived, multi-programmer projects. If all your needs are met by Python, consider yourself lucky; other people's needs are not that simple.

    In terms of libraries, you can have Python/Gtk+, Python/wxWindows, C#/Gtk+, and C#/wxWindows, and all four exist (C#/wxWindows isn't all that far along yet, but people are working on it). So, your choice of toolkit and your choice of language are orthogonal.

  12. Re:Why should "cross platform" always mean Java/.N by Cereal+Box · · Score: 3, Informative

    Python and Java are both languages and run-time thingies.

    Not necessarily. People have targetted other languages for the Java runtime, including Python (Jython) and Scheme (Kawa). Basically, as long as you can spit out Java bytecode it doesn't matter language what you compiled to get it. Same basic idea with .NET.

  13. Re:Evaluation applies to any VM language by ncaHammer · · Score: 3, Informative

    There is nothing special in general about .NET that doesn't apply equally to Java


    Except those
    A. Polymorphic instruction set
    In JVM most instructions have the types of their arguments hardcoded (faster interpretation but harder to create a compiler to emit the correct one)
    In CLR has polymorphic instruction set, only the result type is hardcoded (compilers have much easier job but JITer has more work to do)

    B. Extensible convention for emitted members using attributes
    C. Assembly packaging vs JAR (zip file) packaging (can also contain native code or preJITed code)
    D. In JVM you are unable to encode
    1) enumerations (all)
    2) structures (records in Delphi, struct in C)
    3) unions (C and Delphi)
    4) variant records (only C)
    5) overflow sensitive arithmetic on integer data types (all)
    6) reference parameters (var in Delphi)
    7) function pointers (all)
    8) extern functions with calling convention (all)
    9) variable length arguments (array of in Delphi, C ...)
    10) tail calls (only Scheme IIRC)
    11) Unsafe code (eg C, Delphi pointer/memory manipulation)

    so the compiler writer that targets JVM must emulate all the above (using Java actually) resulting functional crippling or degraded efficiency

    E. JVM has an 64K limit in branching, making compiler writing more difficult than CLR

  14. Re:And how is this better than wxWidgets/wxPython? by StarfishOne · · Score: 4, Informative


    I've been playing around with (wx)Python as well lately and it rocks!

    Especiall combined with:

    Boa Constructor:
    'A cross platform Python IDE and wxPython GUI Builder. It offers visual frame creation and manipulation, an object inspector, many views on the source like object browsers, inheritance hierarchies, doc string generated html documentation, an advanced debugger and integrated help.'

    http://boa-constructor.sourceforge.net/

    And the Twisted framework for network programming. http://www.twistedmatrix.com/

    "Twisted Matrix Laboratories is a distributed group of open-source developers working on Twisted, an event-driven networking framework written in Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP, UDP, SSL/TLS, multicast, Unix sockets, a large number of protocols (including HTTP, NNTP, IMAP, SSH, IRC, FTP, and others), and much more."

    I've now got a fully asynchronous and very fast custom server running.. in less then a day from a clean start with the Python language!

    I really recommend checking this out!! ^_^

  15. Re:Will the coders use it though? by dekeji · · Score: 5, Informative
    Strangely that assumption is quite widespread. I think I've tracked down the source [mono-project.com] though.

    Yes, you have correctly tracked down the source of that misconception. It's an easy misconception to have, given what the Mono project writes about itself.

    Now, dig down a little deeper and go to the downloads. What do you see? A "Mono Stack" on the left, consisting of OSS libraries and APIs, and a .NET stack on the right, consisting of .NET libraries and APIs. You can pick one or the other, or both. Neat, huh? Now, also note the relative sizes of the Mono and .NET stacks.

    Now, turn to the FAQ:

    Question 132: Is Mono only an implementation of the .NET Framework?

    Mono implements both the .NET Framework, as well as plenty of class libraries that are either UNIX specific, Gnome specific, or that are not part of the .NET Framework but people find useful.


    Question 50: Can mono run the WebMatrix?

    No. That requires System.Windows.Forms support which is not currently implemented.


    Question 40: Do you fear that Microsoft will change the spec and render Mono useless?

    No. Microsoft proved with the CLI and the C# language that it was possible to create a powerful foundation for many languages to inter-operate. We will always have that.

    Even if changes happened in the platform which were undocumented, the existing platform would a value on its own.


    What does that tell you?

    • A lot of Mono software (most, in fact) already is completely incompatible with Microsoft .NET, since Mono doesn't even implement important parts of .NET, but does provide extensive non-.NET libraries that are being used by Mono applications. So, .NET compatibilty just doesn't matter to most Mono developers.
    • People know that Microsoft could change .NET, and it generally doesn't matter to them.


    Why is the Mono project seemingly saying one thing and delivering another? Well, in part, it's because the term ".NET" is really ambiguous. In part, it's because where their money comes from and where their commercial interests are (they aren't doing this out of religion, they are in it for commercial purposes).

    So, your confusion is understandable. I wish the Mono project were clearer on their front page, too, but I suspect they have reasons for what they are doing. Either way, you should really dig a little deeper.
  16. Re:Will the coders use it though? by koali · · Score: 3, Informative

    Errrrr... no, it's not.

    In fact, there's a new method in 1.5 to get all the env vars...

    http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/lan g/ System.html#getenv(java.lang.String)
    http://java. sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/lang/ System.html#getenv()

  17. Re:Why should "cross platform" always mean Java/.N by Arkaein · · Score: 2, Informative
    This is pure ignorance. The differences between programming languages and scripting languages are completely in the eyes of the developer. Python has excellent tools for developing solid applications which perform well and make use of libraries normally associate with C/C++ applications:

    • A large standard library that rivals "programming" languages like Java
    • Hooks into popular interface libraries
    • for developing GUI applications
    • A JIT optimizing compiler for speeding up interpreted bytecode to near-directly compiled code speeds
    • Great support for regression/unit testing by allowing "main" functions to be used in every script/class file in large projects

    In short, Python can do pretty much anything Java or Mono is likely able to do. In addition, it's faster and easier to code in than most "programming" languages, largely due to dynamic variable typing.

    For developer friendliness Mono and Java are a step up from C/C++, but languages like Python (and probably Ruby, though I haven't used it) have potential to be even more.

  18. Re:Why should "cross platform" always mean Java/.N by Merk · · Score: 2, Informative

    Java compiles to bytecode, Python compiles to bytecode. If being a "scripting language" means that you're not *forced* to compile to bytecode to run a program, then aren't scripting languages simply a superior form of "programming languages"?

    Verbosity in Java doesn't translate to flexibility. It may occasionally translate to more control, but that's rare. Most of the time, it's just due to the inflexibility of the language. Conversely, just because Python provides an easy way of dealing with files doesn't mean that it lacks flexibility. What kind of low-level things can you do with Java that you can't do with fileno and fcntl in python?

    fileno()

    Return the integer ``file descriptor'' that is used by the underlying implementation to request I/O operations from the operating system. This can be useful for other, lower level interfaces that use file descriptors, such as the fcntl module or os.read() and friends. Note: File-like objects which do not have a real file descriptor should not provide this method!

    Commercial applications use Python and Java. Both are extensively used on servers (like Google uses Python for example). Java may have more desktop GUI use, but Python is used as a scripting engine in many applications, including games.

    As for Java being pure-OO and Python not being pure OO? Mwhahahahahaha.

    % python
    >>> (1).__add__(3)
    4

    Although the syntax may be somewhat ugly, even integers in Python are objects. Try that in Java. Java has Integer objects and 'int' types. That's not even slightly OO, let alone "pure" OO.

    Having said all that, I don't even like Python. I happen to be a big fan of Ruby, and am not at all used to defending Python. I think Python's syntax is ugly. I think significant whitespace for indentation of loops and conditionals is a huge mistake, making the code really inflexible when it comes to copying and pasting. I think it's requirement to pass around self when defining methods within a class is simply stupid. And the few remnants of non-ooness bug me, like len(str) instead of str.len() On the other hand, there's even more I dislike about Java. Java is way too verbose, and incredibly inflexible in a lot of areas. By making things like 'int' types rather than classes, it defeats a lot of the purposes of object orientation. At the same time, it makes things more difficult for programmers by lacking a simple printf/sprintf function. Of languages with a C-like syntax, I guess Java is the best option in most cases, but it's lack of true OOness, and its static typing really annoy me. Misinformed people who think that there is something inherently superior about languages which you have to compile to use just make it worse.

  19. Re:Gtk#? Conservative GC? Hack? by VP · · Score: 2, Informative
    Windows.Forms really needs to be *the* standard implementation.

    Bullshit. Mono supports Windows.Forms via Wine. There is no way this can be "*the* standard". Windows.Forms is tied to the Win32 API, which even MS considers outdated. That is why they are replacing it in Longhorn. From this already discussed article:
    And if you're developing a Windows GUI app today using Microsoft's "official" latest-and-greatest Windows programming environment, WinForms, you're going to have to start over again in two years to support Longhorn and Avalon.

  20. What a retarded website by Nailer · · Score: 2, Informative

    White is the hyperlink color. Clicking the big white link named after the article takes me to the same page.

    The phrase we've got other stuff lined up inside would imply the link goes to the other stuff. The url for it seems like it'd show an index of all their linux content. But the word 'inside' actually shows the article.

  21. Re:Java by turgid · · Score: 2, Informative
    Yeah, and Java really took off now, didn't it?

    It did actually, despite what Microsoft, the Slashbots and the Linux (and Windows) press would have you believe. There are millions of Java developers across the world, there are billions of devices from phones to high-end servers running Java. The number is growing despite what the Redmond Marketting Machine tells you. Even IBM likes Java.

  22. Re:Putting Mono, .Net and all that into perspectiv by StrawberryFrog · · Score: 2, Informative
    .Net was and imho still is - to a large extent - a joke. What MS did was rename the .obj files from all their developement stuff to .net

    You don't know the first thing about it, do you? Go read.

    NET langages compile to plaform-independant bytecode. Shure it's ripping off Java, but it shows good taste in plagarism.

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