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After sitting through a session today on Mono at a local .Net event, the use of MonoTouch was 'touched' upon as an alternative for iPhone development. Being very comfortable in C# and .Net, it seems like an appealing option, despite some of the quirkiness of the Mono stack. However, since MonoTouch costs $400, I'm somewhat torn on if this is the way to go for iPhone development.

Anyone have an experience developing with MonoTouch and Objective-C, and if so is developing with MonoTouch that much simpler and quicker than learning Objective-C, and in turn worth the $400?

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11 Answers

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I've seen this question (and variations on it) a lot lately. What amazes me is how often people respond, but how few answer.

I have my preferences (I enjoy both stacks), but this is where most "answers" start to go wrong. It shouldn't be about what I want (or what anybody else wants).

Here's how I'd go about determining the value of MonoTouch - I can't be objective, obviously, but I think this is pretty zealotry-free:

  • Is this for fun or business? If you wanted to get into consulting in this area, you could make your $399 back very quickly.

  • Do you want to learn the platform inside-out, or do you "just" want to write apps for it?

  • Do you like .Net enough that using a different dev stack would take the fun out of it for you? Again, I like both stacks (Apple and Mono), but for me MonoTouch makes the experience that much more fun. I haven't stopped using Apple's tools, but that's mainly because I really do enjoy both stacks. I love the iPhone, and I love .Net. In that case, for me, MonoTouch was a no-brainer.

  • Do you feel comfortable working with C? I don't mean Objective-C, but C - it matters because Objective-C is C. It's a nice, fancy, friendly OO version, but if pointers give you the heebie-jeebies, MonoTouch is your friend. And don't listen to the naysayers who think you're a dev wuss if it happens that you don't like pointers (or C, etc.). I used to walk around with a copy of the IBM ROM BIOS Pocket Reference, and when I was writing assembly and forcing my computer into funny video modes and writing my own font rendering bits for them and (admittedly trashy) windowing systems, I didn't think the QuickBasic devs were wusses. I was a QuickBasic dev (in addition to the rest). Never give in to nerd machismo. If you don't like C, and if you don't like pointers, and if you want to stay as far away from manual memory management as possible (and, to be fair, it's not bad at all in ObjC), then... MonoTouch. And don't take any guff for it.

  • Would you like to target users or businesses? It doesn't matter much to me, but there are still people out there on Edge, and the fact is: you can create a far smaller download package if you use Apple's stack. I've been playing around with MonoTouch, and I have a decent little app going that, once compressed, gets down to about 2.7 MB (when submitting your app for distribution, you zip it - when apps are downloaded from the store, they're zipped - so when figuring out if your app is going to come in under the 10MB OTA limit, zip the sucker first - you WILL be pleasantly surprised with MonoTouch). But, MT happiness aside, half a meg vs. nearly three (for example) is something that might be important to you if you're targeting end users. If you're thinking of enterprise work, a few MB won't matter at all. And, just to be clear - I'm going to be submitting a MT-based app to the store soonishly, and I have no problem whatsoever with the size. Doesn't bother me at all. But if that's something that would concern you, then Apple's stack wins this one.

  • Doing any XML work? MonoTouch. Period.

  • String manipulation? Date manipulation? A million other little things we've gotten used to with .Net's everything-AND-the-kitchen-sink frameworks? MonoTouch.

  • Web services? MonoTouch.

  • Syntactically, they both have their advantages. Objective-C tends to be more verbose where you have to write it. You'll find yourself writing code with C# you wouldn't have to write with ObjC, but it goes both ways. This particular topic could fill a book. I prefer C# syntax, but after getting over my initial this-is-otherworldly reaction to Objective-C, I've learned to enjoy it quite a bit. I make fun of it a bit in talks (it is weird for devs who're used to C#/Java/etc.), but the truth is that I have an Objective-C shaped spot in my heart that makes me happy.

  • Do you plan to use Interface Builder? Because, even in this early version, I find myself doing far less work to build my UIs with IB and then using them in code. It feels like entire steps are missing from the Objective-C/IB way of doing things, and I'm pretty sure it's because entire steps are missing from the Objective-C/IB way of doing things. So far, and I don't think I've sufficiently tested, but so far, MonoTouch is the winner here for how much less work you have to do.

  • Do you think it's fun to learn new languages and platforms? If so, the iPhone has a lot to offer, and Apple's stack will likely get you out of your comfort-zone - which, for some devs, is fun (Hi - I'm one of those devs - I joke about it and give Apple a hard time, but I've had a lot of fun learning iPhone development through Apple's tools).

There are so many things to consider. Value is so abstract. If we're talking about cost and whether it's worth it, the answer comes down to my first bullet item: if this is for business, and if you can get the work, you'll make your money right back.

So... that's about as objective as I can be. This is a short list of what you might ask yourself, but it's a starting point.

Personally (let's drop the objectivity for a moment), I love and use both. And I'm glad I learned the Apple stack first. It was easier for me to get up and running with MonoTouch when I already knew my way around Apple's world. As others have said, you're still going to be working with CocoaTouch - it's just going to be in a .Net-ized environment.

But there's more than that. The people who haven't used MonoTouch tend to stop there - "It's a wrapper blah blah blah" - that's not MonoTouch.

MonoTouch gives you access to what CocoaTouch has to offer while also giving you access to what (a subset of) .Net has to offer, an IDE some people feel more comfortable with (I'm one of them), better integration with Interface Builder, and although you don't get to completely forget about memory-management, you get a nice degree of leeway.

If you aren't sure, grab Apple's stack (it's free), and grab the MonoTouch eval stack (it's free). Until you join Apple's dev program, both will only run against the simulator, but that's enough to help you figure out if you vastly prefer one to the other, and possible whether MonoTouch is, for you, worth the $399.

And don't listen to the zealots - they tend to be the ones who haven't used the technology they're railing against :)

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Wow, Rory, thanks for taking the time to answer my question in such detail. From what I can tell you're the only one who has used both options, which is who I was looking for an answer from. I'll definitely give both a try a go from there. BTW, I heard you on the most recent SO podcast, right? Good stuff. Thanks again! – jamesaharvey Oct 28 at 1:24
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If I could vote you up twice, I would. Nice talk at #devdays, too. – FryGuy Oct 28 at 1:33
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Thanks for the comments :) I've gotten frustrated with some of the knee-jerk hating I've seen. Over and over the question is responded to with "Ur a idiot lurn to rite the opurating system first looser!!??" Which is unhelpful and insulting. MonoTouch has its rough spots, but those guys have a track record of genius. MT has advanced quickly and is more beautiful every day. I keep saying: give 'em a couple months. They're being prudent about features, but I think we're going to see big stuff. I love Apple's stack, but I have another playground now - that's a good thing and I'm giddy :) – Rory Blyth Oct 30 at 21:00
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Wow. Thank you very much. I've just started looking into this stuff and were about to ask the same question. Luckily I found this. I wish that SO had an option to flag the answer super besides just upping it. :) – mqbt Nov 14 at 20:53
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@mqbt - Thanks :) I know it's weird and un-stackoverflow-ish for me to thank people for thanking me in the comments, but it took a while to type out my answer, so the comments are very appreciated. Glad it was helpful :) – Rory Blyth Nov 15 at 3:54
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Something I'd like to add, even though there's an accepted answer - who is to say that Apple won't just reject apps that have signs of being built with Mono Touch?

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They certainly should, and they should also reject Flash apps, but their App Store terms don't preclude using them. – NSResponder Nov 13 at 18:48
Which as we all know doesn't really mean much of anything. :) – bpapa Nov 13 at 19:10
@bpapa - that's a totally valid concern, but: 1) There's no reason to reject the apps (users don't care what their apps are written with - they care about the apps themselves), and 2) MonoTouch has a lot of potential for enterprise development, and as long as you have an enterprise dev account, Apple can't stop you from distributing your app. Also, Apple accepts games built with Unity. Ultimately, MT follows the rules. Apple's process seems random at times, but... MT follows the rules :| – Rory Blyth Nov 15 at 4:07
Of course there are valid reasons to reject the apps. In the past week we've seen 2 3rd party frameworks get busted for using private APIs. One was Unity, the other was the engine the FB app guy built. Also Apple may just want devs to use Obj-C for their own reasons. If you want to do enterprise apps it's a pain in the ass w/o going through apple. It's really a big question mark as to how Apple feels about Mono Touch and how they will react to it. Why bother playing with that kind of fire, because you hate the format of a method call in objective-c? – bpapa Nov 15 at 22:12
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Using Mono is not a crutch. There are many things that it adds to the iPhone OS. LINQ, WCF, sharable code between a Silverlight app, an ASP.NET page, a WPF app, a Windows Form app, and there's also mono for Android and it will work for Windows Mobile as well.

So, you can spend a bunch of time writing Objective-C (You'll see from many studies where the exact same sample code in C# is significantly less to write than OC) and then DUPLICATE it all for other platforms. For me, I chose MonoTouch because the Cloud App I'm writing will have many interfaces, the iPhone being only one of them. Having WCF data streaming from the cloud to MonoTouch app is insanely simple. I have core libraries that are shared among the various platforms and then only need to write a simple presentation layer for the iPhone/WinMobile/Android/SilverLight/WPF/ASP.NET deployments. Recreating it all in Objective-C would be an enormous waste of time both for initial dev and maintenance as the product continues to move forward since all functionality would have to be replicated rather than reused.

The people who are insulting MonoTouch or insinuating that users of it need a crutch are lacking the Big Picture of what it means to have the .NET framework at your fingertips and maybe don't understand proper separation of logic from presentation done in a way that can be reused across platforms and devices.

Objective-C is interesting and very different from many common languages. I like a challenge and learning different approaches... but not when doing so impedes my progress or creates unnecessary re-coding. There are some really great things about the iPhone SDK framework, but all that greatness is fully supported with MonoTouch and cuts out all the manual memory management, reduces the amount of code required to perform the same tasks, allows me to reuse my assemblies, and keeps my options open to be able to move to other devices and platforms.

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Three words: Linq to SQL

Yes it is well worth the $.

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With Objective-C's Key-Value Bindings and Core Data you get something very similar to Linq-to-SQL. Not the same. Maybe not quite as powerful - but covering a lot of the same ground. Note that Core-Data is not currently supported by MonoTouch – Phil Nash Oct 26 at 8:01
Is Linq to SQL even relevant for an iPhone app? It works with SQLite? – bpapa Nov 13 at 19:42
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I think mono-touch would have become the defacto standard if it was free and open source. As it is, you have to pay for it. To me that means it will always remain a niche product, and niche products are not worth investing time or money in if there is a more popular alternative.

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If $399 can save you hours of work, then a niche product is worth it (provided you're billing a reasonable amount). I've been writing demo apps side-by-side with Apple's stack and MT, and MT is just simply easier. I did a year of development using Apple's stack while at a firm that has done some pretty big apps (Style.com, the Barnes and Noble Store, blah blah blah), and MT is worth it. Wouldn't use it for everything (yet), but it has its place, and it's worth the dough. When you "pay" for it, you're paying for the time (money) you can save by using it. – Rory Blyth Nov 15 at 4:22
Also, haven't the Mono people given us enough for free? Why shouldn't they charge something? Their product exists to make you money - and making that $399 back is not a challenge. And if it's for your day job, the cost of the product is tax-deductible (in the states - and, yeah, it's not a huge savings, but it's something). Also, I'm pretty sure MT is half magic. From a purely nerdy point of view, it's a fascinating thing. You should download the (free) evaluation version and then consider its worth. It's seriously neat-o. – Rory Blyth Nov 15 at 4:28
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There is a lot of hearsay in this post from developers that have not tried MonoTouch and Objective-C. It seems to be mostly be Objective-C developers that have never tried MonoTouch.

I am obviously biased, but you can check out what the MonoTouch community has been up to in:

http://monotouch.info

There you will find several articles from developers that have developed in both Objective-C and C#.

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Miguel, you have a great reputation for coding skill, but Mono on the iPhone is a case of "a job that's not worth doing at all is not worth doing well". – NSResponder Nov 13 at 18:46
@NSResponder - Have you used MonoTouch? It's a v1.x release, practically brand new, and is already amazing. Try it before commenting on it. There are big changes (its Interface Builder integration is far better than Xcode's), and there are little changes (compare the ObjC/Cocoa way of getting the user's documents folder compared to MT's, for example). I still use Apple's stack for some things, but MT is beautiful and full of potential. Seriously - just try it. Or look at how the Cocoa APIs have been bound - you don't have to use it - just don't trash the work without learning about it. – Rory Blyth Nov 15 at 4:01
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The cost of the MonoTouch library is entirely beside the point. The reason you shouldn't use Mono for your iPhone apps, is that it is a crutch. If you can't be bothered to learn the native tools, then I have no reason to believe that your product is worth downloading.

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The market share for Mac OS X is very small and so the iPhone is for many the only compelling reason to even consider bothering with X-Code and ObjC. Both were great 15+ years ago back when it was Project Builder and did cross platform complication and packaging but frankly - as someone who uses a range of platforms - with arguably better tools and languages out there now it's hardly surprisingly developers want to leverage a common codebase and use alternative development tools. It doesn't imply their creations will be below par. – Iain Collins Oct 22 at 20:24
s/complication/compilation/ - Freudian slip... – Iain Collins Oct 22 at 20:25
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I don't know, dude... I think Objective-C and CocoaTouch are a crutch. If you're not writing assembly, I'm going to feel like you just didn't care that much, and I'm not going to download your app (because the first thing users do, of course, is check what tools were used to built the flatulence-simulation app they're downloading). – Rory Blyth Oct 28 at 0:54
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To add to what others have already said (well!): my feeling is that you're basically doubling the number of bugs you have to worry about, adding the ones in MonoTouch to the ones already in iPhone OS. Updating for new OS versions will be even more painful than normal. Yuck, all around.

The only compelling case I can see for MonoTouch is organizations that have lots and lots of C# programmers and C# code lying around that they must leverage on iPhone. (The sort of shop that won't even blink at $3500.)

But for anyone starting out from scratch, I really can't see it as worthwhile or wise.

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Personally I think you'll have a better time just learning Objective-C.

In short:

  • "Learning Objective-C" is not a daunting as you might think, you may even enjoy it after just the first few weeks
  • You are already familiar with the "C style" syntax with lots of *&(){}; everywhere
  • Apple has done a very good job of documenting things
  • You'll be interacting with the iPhone the way Apple intended, which means you'll get the benefits directly from the source not through some filter.

I have found that the projects like Unity and MonoTouch are supposed to "save you time" but ultimately you'll need to learn their domain specific language anyway and will have to side-step things at times. All that is probably going to take you just as long as it would to learn the language you were trying to avoid learning (in calendar time). In the end you didn't save any time and you are tightly coupled to some product.

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First off, C# is not a "domain specific language" - far from it. It's a commodity skill. That's part of the value of MonoTouch. It could be argued (unfairly and inaccurately) that ObjC is a DSL in that most devs (outside finance and university labs and basements) will only ever use it for OS X or iPhone development. But it isn't. Like C#, it's a versatile language that basically exists to let you focus on frameworks rather than the language itself (I think we agree there). But keep in mind that your ObjC code will break with Apple updates. That's not an MT specific issue. – Rory Blyth Nov 2 at 20:58
MT could even save you in some cases because there's this layer of abstraction. Apple modifies an API? Well, your ObjC app and your (let's pretend it exists) equivalent MT app will break. The MT guys could release a stopgap solution to modify how the MonoTouch API handles the call behind the scenes. Your MT code wouldn't have to change - you could just rebuild against the stopgap MT release. Yes: this is a dirty fix that could easily lead to problems, but properly deprecating the stopgap MT API would give devs time to handle the change seamlessly and buy time for a real fix. – Rory Blyth Nov 2 at 21:07
Plus, new as MT is, it just got a lot easier to create your own bindings if necessary (MT 1.2). You're not completely dependent on the MT peeps to do all that work (though they are doing that work), and never were. They have dead-simple ways of creating bindings. They expose enough of the ObjC runtime with the MT frameworks that you're not locked into their way of doing things. I've reimplemented bindings just to see if I like my way better. You can ignore the MT frameworks and send and receive messages "manually" if you want, and it takes little code. They're smart people. Trust them :) – Rory Blyth Nov 2 at 21:17
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So, my answer to a previous similar question is to learn Objective-C. (Also, don't forget about debugging support)

This will probably offend some but to be honest, if you are going to do any serious development, you should learn Objective-C. Not knowing Objective-C in iPhone development will just be a hindrance. You won't be able to understand many examples; you have to deal with the quirks of Mono whereas if you had a working knowledge of Objective-C you could get a lot more out of the platform documentation.

Personally, I don't understand the position that says increasing the amount of information you need in favor of using Mono over the platform's native language. It seems somewhat counterproductive to me. I think if this is a very expensive proposition (learning a new language) then it may be worthwhile spending some time on fundamental programming concepts so that learning new languages is a fairly cheap proposition.

Another user also wrote this:


Monotouch is easier for you now. But harder later.

For example, what happens when new seeds come out you need to test against but break MonoTouch for some reason?

By sticking with Mono, any time you are looking up resources for frameworks you have to translate mentally into how you are going to use them with Mono. Your app binaries will be larger, your development time not that much faster after a few months into Objective-C, and other app developers will have that much more of an advantage over you because they are using the native platform.

Another consideration is that you are looking to use C# because you are more familiar with the language than Objective-C. But the vast majority of the learning curve for the iPhone is not Objective-C, it is the frameworks - which you will have to call into with C# as well.

For any platform, you should use the platform that directly expresses the design philosophy of that platform - on the iPhone, that is Objective-C. Think about this from the reverse angle, if a Linux developer used to programming in GTK wanted to write Windows apps would you seriously recommend that they not use C# and stick to GTK because it was "easier" for them to do so?


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vote up 5 vote down

If this is the only iPhone app you will ever develop, and you also have zero interest in developing Mac applications, ever, then MonoTouch is probably worth the cost.

If you think you'll ever develop more iPhone apps, or will ever want to do some Mac native development, it's probably worth it to learn Objective-C and the associated frameworks. Plus, if you're the type of programmer that enjoys learning new things, it's a fun new paradigm to study.

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