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From Visual Studio Live!: Microsoft's Xamarin guy James Montemagno described the combination of C# and Xamarin as the perfect mobile platform.
Xamarin has announced Xamarin.Mac, a new tool that enables developers to use C# to build Mac OS X apps.
Xamarin has been bringing .NET to iOS and Android developers for a number of years, including enabling iOS development from within Visual Studio. Microsoft, of course, has been doing the same for ...
Xamarin is furthering its mission to make C# the mobile-development language of choice by allowing iOS coders to use Microsoft's Visual Studio.
Xamarin, the folks that created the Mono open-source implementation of Microsoft's .NET framework, are at it again. This time, they've managed to port parts of Android to Microsoft's C# language.
The Xamarin studio, which also allows developers to build Mac apps, lets C# developers leverage their existing skills, “essentially transforming existing teams into mobile developers virtually ...
SAN FRANCISCO—Microsoft bought Xamarin, the popular C#-and-.NET-on-iOS-and-Android, last month. At its Build developer conference today, the company announced the first big step for its new ...
Microsoft says it will make Xamarin available at no extra charge for Visual Studio Enterprise and Professional users, and include Xamarin’s capabilities in Visual Studio Community.
Xamarin, the company that empowers more than 600,000 developers to build fully native mobile apps for all major device platforms in Visual Studio, tod ...
Xamarin is gaining popularity since its inclusion in Visual Studio, especially because it is now open-source and free. Xamarin is "near-native"; source code is compiled into native iOS and Android.
Certain combinations just make sense, and C# and Xamarin are certainly one of those combinations. James Montemagno is widely known as the Xamarin guy and his message during his keynote session at ...