Post by Prezence on Feb 23, 2015 4:18:03 GMT 10
Last Edit: Feb 23, 2015 4:18:35 GMT 10 by Prezence
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Post by Nathan Lecompte on Feb 23, 2015 15:02:48 GMT 10
It's in C# and yeah it's been ages, take's time....a lot of time, also because my computer crashed a couple of times :/ which made it difficult to do stuff...I'm hoping that I'd release it this year
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Post by Izy Coder on Feb 25, 2015 19:32:54 GMT 10
...
Check Out My Project At VSlang InternetTM. More Project : - Poroxnoss Text Editor 2 - Added soon...
- TAP 2D Game Maker - Coming really soon...
- Easy Desktop - Discontinue..
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Post by altair on Mar 6, 2015 22:13:04 GMT 10
Well Instead of creating an entire IDE and Application and APIs and Stuff. It would be nice if you base over something simple. For example, Core ( a project that I am working on - it's like a kernel for vb.net virtual OSes.) Accepts a package with extension .pac. Which is a zip file containing a metadata, html page, css(not required), javascript(not required). Core has bunch of APIs to handle things that Javascript and HTML5 Apps. As a result Core is easy to port to other platforms and people are ready for the programming resulting in abundance of apps. So essentially Core is a bridge between Native and Web Apps. Well it's still up to you, And It's just my idea, Sorry for the nonsense , Altair - The Flying One
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Post by altair on Mar 6, 2015 22:13:56 GMT 10
And by the way,
.NET is now open source. So be happy to dig in.
Altair - The Flying One
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Post by Imformas on Mar 7, 2015 20:46:59 GMT 10
.Net Framework has always been open source. hasn't it. :/
Programming language'sCSharpC++CObjective-CVBProject'sSharpMediaSharpEditYoutifygithub.com/Stephen-Fox-0
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Post by altair on Mar 7, 2015 22:19:34 GMT 10
Actually, You are wrong, Last Year on November, Microsoft made .NET framework (Core) open.
Lines from Wikipedia: "On 12 November 2014, Microsoft announced .NET Core, in an effort to include cross-platform support for .NET, the source release of Microsoft's CoreCLR implementation, source for the "entire [...] library stack" for .NET Core, and the adoption of a conventional ("bazaar"-like) open source development model under the stewardship of the .NET Foundation. Miguel de Icaza describes .NET Core as a "redesigned version of .NET that is based on the simplified version of the class libraries",[32] and Microsoft's Immo Landwerth explained that .NET Core would be "the foundation of all future .NET platforms".[33]"
Altair - The Flying One
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