MonoDevelop is a full-featured integrated development environment (IDE) for mono using Gtk#.
The MonoDevelop core is also the foundation for Visual Studio for Mac. Feel free to file bugs against Visual Studio for Mac here as well.
See http://www.monodevelop.com for more info.
There are two main directories:
main
: The core MonoDevelop assemblies and add-ins (all in a single tarball/package).extras
: Additional add-ins (each add-in has its own tarball/package).
If you are building from Git, make sure that you initialize the submodules
that are part of this repository by executing:
git submodule update --init --recursive
If you are running a parallel mono installation, make sure to run all the following steps while having sourced your mono installation script. (source path/to/my-environment-script) See: http://www.mono-project.com/Parallel_Mono_Environments
To compile execute:
./configure ; make
There are two variables you can set when running configure
:
-
The install prefix:
--prefix=/path/to/prefix
- To install with the rest of the assemblies, use:
--prefix="$(pkg-config --variable=prefix mono)"
- To install with the rest of the assemblies, use:
-
The build profile:
--profile=profile-name
gnome
: builds for Linuxwindows
: builds for Windowsmac
: builds for Mac OS X
PS: You can also create your own profile by adding a file to the profiles directory containing a list of the directories to build.
Disclaimer: Please be aware that the 'extras/JavaBinding' and 'extras/ValaBinding' packages do not currently work. When prompted or by manually selecting them during the './configure --select' step, make sure they stay deselected. (deselected by default)
You can run MonoDevelop from the build directory by executing:
make run
You can debug MonoDevelop using Visual Studio (on Windows or macOS) with the
main/Main.sln
solution. Use the DebugWin32
configuration on Windows and the
DebugMac
configuration on macOS.
You can install MonoDevelop by running:
make install
Bear in mind that if you are installing under a custom prefix, you may need to modify your /etc/ld.so.conf
or LD_LIBRARY_PATH
to ensure that any required native libraries are found correctly.
(It's possible that you need to install for your locale to be correctly set.)
To package MonoDevelop for OS X in a convenient MonoDevelop.app
file, just do this after MonoDevelop has finished building (with
make
): cd main/build/MacOSX ; make app
.
You can run MonoDevelop: open MonoDevelop.app
or build dmg package: ./make-dmg-bundle.sh
BUILD_REVISION
If this environment variable exists we assume we are compiling inside wrench.
We use this to enable raygun only for 'release' builds and not for normal
developer builds compiled on a dev machine with 'make && make run'.
"The type `GLib.IIcon' is defined in an assembly that is not referenced"
This happens when you accidentally installed gtk-sharp3 instead of the 2.12.x branch version. Make sure to 'make uninstall' or otherwise remove the gtk-sharp3 version and install the older one.
xbuild may still cache a reference to assemblies that you may have accidentally installed into your mono installation, like the gtk-sharp3 as described before. You can delete the cache in $HOME/.config/xbuild/pkgconfig-cache-2.xml
Gnome Human Interface Guidelines (HIG)
[email protected] (questions and discussion)
[email protected] (track commits to MonoDevelop)
[email protected] (track MonoDevelop bugzilla component)
https://github.com/mono/monodevelop/issues/new (submit bugs and patches here)