![]() ![]() Even when XAMLC is on, you still have to compile before finding any errors, and forget about any refactorings. ![]() Sometimes intellisense is there, sometimes it isn’t. One of the pain points though is that Visual Studio Mac (or even VS Windows) doesn’t treat Xamarin.Forms XAML as a first class citizen. One, I get to use C# (as opposed to Swift or Java), if I'm lucky I'm able to develop a complete app with almost 100% shared code, and the Xamarin.Forms framework is pretty well put together - it sports a great binding engine, I find the abstractions over the common controls covers at least 85% of the day-to-day scenarios I run into, and I can dive into the platform specific code if needed to really customize my apps. I find Xamarin.Forms development rather enjoyable.
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