Mono on Linux before 3.12 by default didn't trust any SSL certificates so you got errors when accessing HTTPS resources. This is not required anymore as 3.12 and later include a new tool that runs on package installation and syncs Mono's certificate store with the system certificate store (on older versions you had to import Mozilla's list of trusted certificates by running mozroots --import --sync). Some systems are configured in a way so that the necessary package isn't pulled in when Mono is installed, in those cases make sure the ca-certificates-mono package is installed.
If, like me, you followed the official guide: -project.com/download/stable/ then you would have added an apt key and created/etc/apt/sources.list.d/mono-official-stable.listYou can keep the key, but remove the file above using sudo rm -r /etc/apt/sources.list.d/mono-official-stable.listThen make sure you follow the best answer above by editing the mono-xamarin.list file for the version you want and remove the version of mono you have.Then apt update, then install mono-complete. An easy way to know you are correctly downloading and compiling a different version is that apt will prompt you asking if you want to download the files, and the size will be different.
Starting with Mono 5.18, support for LLVM is a default configuration option. Previous versions required a special LLVM fork, but now mono can fall back to its own code generator when it encounters something not handled by LLVM.[28]
I've had some experience with .NET Core but I've never used mono before. So I installed mono on a machine running Ubuntu 20.04 but I cannot find the dotnet version that it will be used (since I must use 4.7.2).
I'm trying to install a nuget package (Xamarin.Firebase.Firestore) which requires a newer version of Xamarin.GooglePlayServices.Basement (60.1142.0, I have 42.1021.1), which in turn requires me to update the xamarin.android.support packages. When I try to update those, I get this error "Package Xamarin.Android.Support.Design 27.0.2 is not compatible with monoandroid80 (MonoAndroid,Version=v8.0). Package Xamarin.Android.Support.Design 27.0.2 supports: monoandroid81 (MonoAndroid,Version=v8.1)"
I want to have the option of C#, but I also don't want to download that C# version and not have access to other coding features if I need them, want to practice with them, etc. I guess I'm just wondering what I will be missing if I download the C# mono version.
I've read through the Godot page about differences between the C#/mono version and the standard version (gdscript), and it primarily seems to be focused on the fact that C# is a different language with different conventions, and that support is a new feature that may have issues. It doesn't really seem to discuss any different capabilities or features gained or lost by using one version vs. the other.
Actually I think we did see someone else with that issue. Old mono version was causing Duplicati to crash at the end of the backup job, and it never recorded that the backup job was run in the database. So when Duplicati restarted, the schedule kicked off again.
Basically im thinking of using mono so that if I want to I can have the option to use C# here and there, but if I do that would that have any negative impacts or would there be limitations on mono version even in projects that are only written in GDScript?
1 - What are the core differences?
2 - As the title is asking - what's the difference between mono and standard version? I see that standard doesn't have c# support. Does this mean i cannot write scripts or write a complete app if I download standard? is that what it means?
3 - An internet search says that Unity is the most popular worldwide. Does it mean others are somewhat more inferior or not as good? What are apps used to create games in the google play store? (This is a wide / big question that no one may be able to answer.) If my question is too big / wide, just say it's not a valid question.
2: as you said, the mono version supports C#. That is the core difference. The standard version supports godot own scripting language, gdscript, so you can still write scripts and do everything you would be able to do in the mono version.
The current stable Debian 7/Wheezy is running on my server.
With apt-get the latest mono version I can get is 2.10 which is three years old.
I looked up the mono-complete package and even on unstable Debian 9/Sid all you get is version 3.2.8, when the latest stable version is 3.6 and 3.8.1 is available.
Is there a way to get an at least somewhat recent version of mono with apt-get? Following a guide to install the latest mono was rather uncomfortable to me and I dread the next time I want to do an update.
Is there a way to get an at least somewhat recent version of mono with apt-get? Following a guide to install the latest mono was rather uncomfortable to me and I dread the next time I want to do an update.
The output of which mono and mono --version would be helpful, and also information on how you installed mono. Did you download the installer from their site, or install it via a system such as Homebrew or MacPorts?
Hello,
I have not too much experience with other hosts. But in Logic Pro X for most plugins, when I try to insert it on tracks insert slot I have option to choose stereo version or mono.
How to achieve such option?
However, now all Xamarin.iOS projects should migrate to .NET 6/7 iOS/MAUI, so Mono hasn't been updated for long -project.com/docs/about-mono/releases/ Likely 6.12.0.182 will be the last release of Mono, so no need to update release notes.
I did some testing with the UAD plugins. I found that it makes absolutely no difference (in sound or DSP load) whether I use the stereo or mono versions on mono channels. Obviously using the mono version on a stereo channel is no good.
Hi tafelpoowt, I'm anxious to try this on my Ex2Ultra, but so far have not been able to get it to install. I downloaded the corresponding files from the ffmpeg, mono and emby folders. When I try to install mono or ffmpeg (from "Apps" tab -> "Install an app manually"), I get a window saying "Updating ..." followed by "Error: Failed to install app."
Check out -project.com/download/stable/ and follow the instructions to add their repositories for Ubuntu 18.04. After running the apt update step, you will have those versions of mono available to install via apt.
The filename line tells you where to find the actual .deb file relative to the server root. Here, it would be -project.com/repo/ubuntu/pool/main/m/mono-basic/libmono-cecil-vb0.9-cil_4.7-0xamarin3+ubuntu1804b1_all.deb. That said, once you've found the thing you want in the package file, you can also just apt-get install mono-basic, and the package manager will take care of the rest.
Test source code can be found in tools/tests, mono/mono/tests, mono/mcs/class/*/Test, and mono-basic/vbruntime/Test. See -project.com/community/contributing/test-suite/ for information on Mono's tests.
I'm having an issue I was hoping to get resolved. I purchased The Beatles in Mono CD box set years ago and immediately imported them into my iTunes library. For years, all tracks were good except for two. For some reason, these two tracks imported as their stereo versions and not their mono versions as they were supposed to.
Cut to today, and I've decided to try to rectify that. One of the tracks was able to successfully import in its correct mono version, yet the other one will not. I've even tried my Import Settings to mono.
All the software would see is exactly the same information on both the left and right channels and it would not care. All you would hear from a mono track (marked in iTunes as stereo) is exactly the same sound from both the left and right speakers; in other words, every sound appears to be exactly in the middle of the sound stage (using your earbuds, the sounds would be in the middle of your head).
Unraid does not have mono as part of its base install! The issue will be the version of mono installed inside the container. It is up to the container maintainer to make such an update and has nothing to do with UnRAID itself.
if no internet connection then OS loop mount or local repo need and those os dependencies has to be figured out and install then cvd will install mono 6.8 on its start. To avoid these manual part, has it registered with internet connection then cvd will take care of Mono 6.8 installation.
As mentioned earlier, easy way is have machine registered with RedHat vendor with internet connection then restart cvd is good to install mono.tgz from /opt/commvault/Base folder. Above part required as that mono related OS updates will be take from Redhat repos like appstream-rpms, baseos-rpms and supplementary-rpms.
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