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On the desktop side, Mono works great if you commit to using GTK#. The Windows.Forms implementation is still a little buggy (For example, TrayIcon's don't work) but it has come a long way. Besides, GTK# is a better toolkit than windows forms as it is.

On the web side, Mono has implemented enough of ASP.NET to run most sites perfectly. The difficulty here is finding a host that has mod_mono installed on apache, or doing it yourself if you have shell access to your host.

Either way, Mono is great, and stable.

Key things to remember when creating a cross platform program:

  • Use GTK# instead of Windows.Forms
  • Ensure to properly case your filenames
  • Use Path.Seperator instead of hardcoding "\", also use Enviroment.NewLine instead of "/n".
  • Do not use any P/Invoked calls to Win32 API.
  • Do not use the Windows Registry.


Editing to also highlight miguel.de.icaza's post, since he is on the Mono dev team. I also want to recommend un-accepting this answer, since this is a question for which real answer will change over time- we want to allow the correct answer to stay at the top, even if this becomes out of date.

show/hide this revision's text 2 added 87 characters in body

On the desktop side, Mono works great if you commit to using GTK#. The Windows.Forms implementation is still a little buggy (For example, TrayIcon's don't work) but it has come a long way. Besides, GTK# is a better toolkit than windows forms as it is.

On the web side, Mono has implemented enough of ASP.NET to run most sites perfectly. The difficulty here is finding a host that has mod_mono installed on apache, or doing it yourself if you have shell access to your host.

Either way, Mono is great, and stable.

Key things to remember when creating a cross platform program:

  • Use GTK# instead of Windows.Forms
  • Ensure to properly case your filenames
  • Use Path.Seperator instead of hardcoding "\", also use Enviroment.NewLine instead of "/n".
  • Do not use any P/Invoked calls to Win32 API.
  • Do not use the Windows Registry.


Editing to also highlight miguel.de.icaza's post, since he is on the Mono dev team.

show/hide this revision's text 1

On the desktop side, Mono works great if you commit to using GTK#. The Windows.Forms implementation is still a little buggy (For example, TrayIcon's don't work) but it has come a long way. Besides, GTK# is a better toolkit than windows forms as it is.

On the web side, Mono has implemented enough of ASP.NET to run most sites perfectly. The difficulty here is finding a host that has mod_mono installed on apache, or doing it yourself if you have shell access to your host.

Either way, Mono is great, and stable.

Key things to remember when creating a cross platform program:

  • Use GTK# instead of Windows.Forms
  • Ensure to properly case your filenames
  • Use Path.Seperator instead of hardcoding "\", also use Enviroment.NewLine instead of "/n".
  • Do not use any P/Invoked calls to Win32 API.
  • Do not use the Windows Registry.