EDIT The paragraph below (indented) was initially written in response to first version of the question, which was later fixed by the inquirer: The extension means next to nothing. Essentially, there is no such thing as 'extension'. It used to be a notion of obsolete Microsoft systems, but now this is mostly just a convention. If you change file name ('.exe' is nothing but a file name), the Window shell wont recognize it, but you still can start the application programmatically. The function of a file is defined by its content, not name. On Mac OS X, and other.NIX (Unix-like) systems, an executable file can have any file name, '.exe' or not.END EDIT Now, there is a way to run.NET applications on many platforms, for the applications limited to some standard subset of.NET FCL, BCL + some non-standard libraries, with some limitations.
Nov 25, 2016 - You can install windows system on Mac which means you have 2 operating system right. I downloaded Visual Code Studio on my Mac, How do I run my code? Video Transcript: In this video, I am going to show you how you can take your existing C++ code from other development environments such as Visual Studio, and use it in projects and applications that run natively on both Windows and Mac through the FireMonkey Application Framework.
The product common for Windows and Mac is Mono, an alternative CLR implementation: ,. With Mono, you can develop applications on Windows and run on Mono (Windows or other platforms) without re-compliation. It works better on, say, Linux, and works but the UI looks quite foreign on Mac. If you want to follow authentic Mac's UI rules, you will need additional project which is installed on top on Mono and — attention!
— replaced Mono's runtime command line: ,. You can also develop standad Mac OS X installation packages. But with such UI, you will need to do a big part of development with real Mac OS X system.
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Welcome to my first post! I will be showing you how I develop C using along with the and extensions. Downloading Visual Studio Code First we will need a code editor or IDE, I personally like Visual Studio Code (VSC for short) because it is lightweight like Sublime, but has some of the features I like from IDEs, specially Intellisense. You can download Visual Studio Code, you will land on a page like this: Click the download button and wait a few seconds for the download to start.
Setting up VSC for C development The first time you open VSC you will see a welcome window. VSC has a very simple layout: a bar on the left with 5 buttons (File explorer, Find, Git integration, Debug, Extensions), a status bar on the bottom and a window with tabs for the editors.
Click the last button to open Extensions: To develop C we will install two extensions, the first one is C/C, which is already shown in the last figure, to install it just click the green button that says Install: Then we will search for 'easy c' and then install the extension called 'Easy C Projects' Environment setup finished After installing the extensions, a blue button will appear saying Reload, clicking it will reload the window and activate the extensions we just installed, as shown here: Good job! Now we have an environment for depeloping our first C project! Creating our first C project with Visual Studio Code! After setting up VSC for C development, we just need to create a new project!
This is done in a few steps: Creating a folder for the project To set the folder for the project, go to File Open folder (or press Ctrl+K Ctrl+O), a dialog like this will pop up: Create a new folder and press 'Select folder', the dialog will close and the window will reload and open the folder we have created. Creating a C project Press F1, a little window will appear with lots of different commands, search for 'c' and click 'Create new C project': Now we will be asked what compiler we want to use, look the Easy C extension page for information on how to setup a compiler for your operating system. I will use Windows Subsystem for Linux.