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I need a conditional compilation switch that knows if I am compiling for the mono or MS .NET runtime. How can I do this?

2 Answers 2

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The Mono compiler defines __MonoCS__

BUT, BUT, BUT, the whole point of Mono is that you can take an assembly that you built with VS and run it on Mono, or vice versa.

It seems to me that if you need to have Mono vs MS.NET differences, then you need to be making those decisions at run-time.

The standard way to detect Mono at Runtime is:

bool runningOnMono = Type.GetType ("Mono.Runtime") != null;
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    @Will Dean You occasionally need to use conditionally compilations. E.g. Mono doesn't support the attribute; ViewStateModeById which triggers a runtime failure if you've tagged a class with it. So what you're saying is not completely accurate... Nov 30, 2008 at 17:15
  • I'm not familiar with that attribute, but that still seems to me that the future presence or absence of the ViewStateModeById attribute is not something which directly correlates with the compiler which was used to compile your assemblies. But there's always MonoCS if it does...
    – Will Dean
    Nov 30, 2008 at 18:07
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    Understand the point but Mono has a lot of catching up to do in places, and there is no point penalising the MS build... Good tip though thanks Dec 2, 2008 at 11:18
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    One use case is having GTK# GUI on Mono, and Windows.Forms GUI on .Net. Mar 1, 2011 at 20:26
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    BUT BUT BUT it isn't the whole point of Mono that you can take an assembly that you built with VS and run it on Mono, or vice versa. It depends on the platform.... what about Xamarins products for mac and mobile??? they invented mono and they don't do this. So you are clearly wrong. While it does work sometimes it doesn't with others. Jan 26, 2015 at 10:50
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It is clear that there are times when code on one platform will differ to code on another and you may wish to do this at run-time or maybe compile time. Some times it can't be done at run-time.

For example:

Mono is used as the basis of Xamarin's Ios, Android, and Mac tool kits. While these have a lot of common code they also have classes which only appear on a single platform. When developing with these tool kits you develop native packages which are not exchangeable between platforms.

A simple case is file names and paths. These differ on each platform. I just might to have a little condition to load the strings differently on each platform. Some platforms have case specific file names some don't.

It would be nice if there was a little bit of code which returned the current platform - be it UNIX, iOS, Mac, X86, X64, XBox etc....

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    .NET already has abstractions for handling paths portably. System.IO.Path.DirectorySeparatorChar, for example. So, no need to build your own logic to handle the different OS possibilities for that case.
    – Nate C-K
    Jan 23, 2015 at 16:54

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