This tutorial shows how to create and run a .NET Core console application using Visual Studio for Mac.
Note
Your feedback is highly valued. There are two ways you can provide feedback to the development team on Visual Studio for Mac:
- In Visual Studio for Mac, select Help > Report a Problem from the menu or Report a Problem from the Welcome screen, which will open a window for filing a bug report. You can track your feedback in the Developer Community portal.
- To make a suggestion, select Help > Provide a Suggestion from the menu or Provide a Suggestion from the Welcome screen, which will take you to the Visual Studio for Mac Developer Community webpage.
Prerequisites
Dotnet For Mac
Supported.NET is free. There are no fees or licensing costs, including for commercial use.NET is open-source and cross-platform, with free development tools for Windows, Linux, and macOS.NET is supported by Microsoft. Microsoft ships official releases that are built and tested on Microsoft-maintained servers in Azure and supported just like any Microsoft product.
- Aim of this project is development of a.NET Framework for MacOS X computers, allowing them to run.NET-applications and create/port.NET development tools. This projects intends to cooperate with other.NET projects, such as DotGNU and Mono. Follow MacOS.NET Framework MacOS.NET Framework Web.
- .Net is such a framework which wasn’t available over cross-platforms for a long time, unlike the.NET Core. However, with recent updates and a few tweaks, it is possible to use.net for mac OS. The.Net core SDK need to install in Mac and Linux OS.
Teamviewer mac os sierra. Visual Studio for Mac version 8.6 or later. Select the option to install .NET Core. Installing Xamarin is optional for .NET Core development. For more information, see the following resources:
- Tutorial: Install Visual Studio for Mac.
- Supported macOS versions.
- .NET Core versions supported by Visual Studio for Mac.
Create the app
Create a .NET Core console app project named 'HelloWorld'.
Start Visual Studio for Mac.
Select New in the start window.
In the New Project dialog, select App under the Web and Console node. Select the Console Application template, and select Next.
In the Target Framework drop-down of the Configure your new Console Application dialog, select .NET Core 3.1, and select Next.
Type 'HelloWorld' for the Project Name, and select Create.
The template creates a simple 'Hello World' application. It calls the Console.WriteLine(String) method to display 'Hello World!' in the terminal window.
The template code defines a class, Program
, with a single method, Main
, that takes a String array as an argument:
Main
is the application entry point, the method that's called automatically by the runtime when it launches the application. Any command-line arguments supplied when the application is launched are available in the args
array.
Run the app
Press ⌥⌘↵ (option+command+enter) to run the app without debugging.
Close the Terminal window.
Enhance the app
Enhance the application to prompt the user for their name and display it along with the date and time.
In Program.cs, replace the contents of the
Main
method, which is the line that callsConsole.WriteLine
, with the following code:This code displays a prompt in the console window and waits until the user enters a string followed by the enter key. It stores this string in a variable named
name
. It also retrieves the value of the DateTime.Now property, which contains the current local time, and assigns it to a variable nameddate
. And it displays these values in the console window. Finally, it displays a prompt in the console window and calls the Console.ReadKey(Boolean) method to wait for user input.The
n
represents a newline character.The dollar sign (
$
) in front of a string lets you put expressions such as variable names in curly braces in the string. The expression value is inserted into the string in place of the expression. This syntax is referred to as interpolated strings.Press ⌥⌘↵ (option+command+enter) to run the app.
Respond to the prompt by entering a name and pressing enter.
Close the terminal.
Next steps
In this tutorial, you created a .NET Core console application. In the next tutorial, you debug the app.
You have a Mac,
.Net Framwork is for Windows and normally you would have to install Windows either into BootCamp or
.net Framework For Mac Os X
a virtual machine software (better,easier, not as powerful as direct install, fine if you don't need it) like VMFusion (best), Parallels Desktop (best) or the free Virtualbox (works)
But there is a Open Source .Net framework called Mono
I don't have any expereince with this, so your on your own
Perhaps that's for the developers to implement with their programs, I don't know if there is a Mac client so you can access .Net
Ask the website your visiting to do something so your Mac can also visit and use the site.
Apr 4, 2012 7:54 PM