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Cross-Platform .NET Development: Using Mono, Portable.NET, and Microsoft .NET

Cross-Platform .NET Development: Using Mono, Portable.NET, and Microsoft .NET

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Authors: M.j. Easton, Jason King
Publisher: Apress
Category: Book

List Price: $59.99
Buy New: $28.94
You Save: $31.05 (52%)



New (15) Used (15) from $18.31

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 784540

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Pages: 560
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.9 x 1.4

ISBN: 1590593308
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.1
UPC: 689253153086
EAN: 9781590593301
ASIN: 1590593308

Publication Date: September 22, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Accessories:

  • Workflow in the 2007 Microsoft Office System
  • Pro C# with .NET 3.0, Special Edition (Pro)
  • Microsoft SharePoint: Building Office 2007 Solutions in C# 2005 (Expert's Voice in Sharepoint)

Similar Items:

  • Mono: A Developer's Notebook
  • Practical Mono (Expert's Voice in Open Source)
  • Mono Kick Start
  • Windows Presentation Foundation Unleashed (WPF) (Unleashed)
  • CLR via C#, Second Edition (Pro Developer)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Well, I came home today to a pleasant surprise (Cross-Platform .NET Development: Using Mono, Portable.NET, and Microsoft .NET). So I can start freestyling, cross-platform style. An enthusiastically recommended resource especially for anyone pursuing, building, or studying for a career in the field.

— Midwest Book Review, Internet Bookwatch

.NET is not just for Windows anymore! And this unprecedented book examines the advantages of building portable, cross-platform.NET code. Even if you are only vaguely familiar with .NET, with the aid of this book, you'll quickly learn how to run .NET code on different platforms.

You may run code among the Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, and Windows platforms. And you'll get to choose among Mono (for Linux), Portable.NET (for Mac OS X), and of course, .NET for Windows. What's more, authors Mark Easton and Jason King pack the book with example code and wisdom, providing you a well-rounded skill set. Based on years of personal .NET experience, the authors share years of expertise&emdash;do's, dont's, pitfalls, gotchas, and insights&emdash;in the convenience of a single, handy book.


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Good on principles, shallow on cross-platform libraries.   March 4, 2005
Michael J. Ryan (theroughnecks.net)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

Okay, I got this book mostly to get into issues common to cross platform development. With focus on say, cross-platform gui libraries, and other cross-platform libraries.

In that I was a bit disappointed, but I was very happy to see how many somewhat advanced design principles were covered, and the breadth of this book. I am hoping that they expand into at least a companion book on maybe the Tao libraries, GTK#, wx.Net and other cross-platform libraries for front-end/interface coding.

I've also been reading the Nantz book for "Open Source .Net Development" and found it to be even more broad, and more shallow. Hopefully we will see some books that cover a bit more depth on fewer topics, and more specifically towards open-source cross platform libraries.

It is definately a good book, and covers a lot into the hows, and why's, but not so deep in any of the topics covered that you get a solid grasp on anything beyond design principles... This gives it a Four-Star rating in my book. It's worth a read for a mid-level developer looking to branch out into more serious development, or a development manager looking for better organization into development (cross platform or not). Don't expect to walk away comfortable on any of the tools that are mentioned in the book.



5 out of 5 stars A guide written especially for professionals   December 12, 2004
Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA)
5 out of 8 found this review helpful

Cross-Platform .NET Development Using Mono, Portable .NET and Microsoft .NET is a guide written especially for professionals. Expert .NET programmers M. J. Easton and Jason King explore the three most popular .NET implementations and demonstrate how to build a powerful cross-platform software using their framework. Flowcharts, examples and sample code lay out all aid in clarification of complex principles of organizational superstructure that will save labor, time, and money. Chapters address common cross-platform pitfalls, using GUI toolkits, incorporating native code, strategies for testing and building, and much more. An enthusiastically recommended resource especially for anyone pursuing, building, or studying for a career in the field.



4 out of 5 stars alternatives to Microsoft   October 21, 2004
W Boudville (Terra, Sol 3)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Microsoft and cross-platform?! Sounds like an oxymoron. Yet the book shows how .NET has given rise to this. The key step was Microsoft transferring the specifications of C# and .NET's CLI to ECMA and ISO. This lets third parties write compilers that produce IL bytecode and thence to assembly in a given hardware.

So you could write C# code on some platform, like linux. Then with Mono or Portable.NET, produce x86 binaries.

The authors describe the open source Mono and Portable, and compare these with Microsoft's own .NET offerings. They show that Mono and Portable are quite functional. For example, using Portable, you can write in Java, C#, C or VB.NET and compile.

The book goes into some moderate level of detail about CLI. But if you are a programmer in C# or C, say, and you just want to get native binaries, without wanting to know about CLI, the book is still useful. You can safely skip the CLI sections, without losing the gist of what you need to know. For many of us, whatever language we use, we don't need or want knowledge of a specific assembly language.



5 out of 5 stars Best Mono book yet   October 12, 2004
Jack D. Herrington (Silicon Valley, CA)
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I prefer this book to the Mono : Developers Notebook which was also recently published. This book provides a much wider angle view on the .NET cross platform development space. For example, the developers note book covers TK#, this book covers TK# and #WT.

This book is much more architectural in design than the Developers Notebook. So if code is your thing then you may want to evaluate both. I personally prefer architectural perspective because in this case it's more about choosing a direction of development as opposed to learning the structure of the TK# library, which is interesting, but can be gleaned from the online documentation.

This is a must have book for anyone who wants to take their .NET code beyond the confines of the Windows operating system. It's well worth the price of admission.


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