Book Image

Creating Cross-Platform C# Applications with Uno Platform

By : Matt Lacey, Marcel Alexander Wagner
Book Image

Creating Cross-Platform C# Applications with Uno Platform

By: Matt Lacey, Marcel Alexander Wagner

Overview of this book

Developers are increasingly being asked to build native applications that run on multiple operating systems and in the browser. In the past, this would have meant learning new technologies and making multiple copies of an application. But the Uno Platform allows you to use tools, languages, and APIs you already know from building Windows apps to develop apps that can also run on other platforms. This book will help you to create customer-facing as well as line-of-business apps that can be used on the device, browser, or operating system of your choice. This practical guide enables developers to put their C# and XAML knowledge to work by writing cross-platform apps using the Uno Platform. Packed with tips and practical examples, this book will help you to build applications for common scenarios. You'll begin by learning about the Uno Platform through step-by-step explanations of essential concepts, before moving on to creating cross-platform apps for different lines of business. Throughout this book, you'll work with examples that will teach you how to combine your existing knowledge to manage common development environments and implement frequently needed functionality. By the end of this Uno development book, you will have learned how to write your own cross-platform apps with the Uno Platform and use additional tools and libraries to speed up your app development process.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting to Know Uno Platform
4
Section 2: Writing and Developing Uno Platform Apps
9
Section 3: Test, Deploy, and Contribute

Introducing the app

The app we'll be building in this chapter is called Network Assist. It's an application that will be made available to all staff. It is particularly useful to those working at stations in a public-facing capacity. The real version of this app would have many features, but we're only going to implement two:

  • Showing when the next trains will arrive at each station
  • Recording and reporting details of events happening around the network.

As this application will be used by staff members as they perform their jobs across the network, it will be built to run on Android and iOS devices.

What does "mobile" mean?

It's easy to think of "mobile" as only being about the device an app is on, but to do so is limiting. "Mobile" can be a helpful shorthand for "Android and iOS devices." However, it's essential to remember more than phones (or tablets) are mobile. It's also the person who...