Can't Run C# Code in Xamarin Studio, Play Button Greyed Out - c#

This might have a very simple answer.
I'm trying to learn C# on my Mac, so I downloaded Visual Studio for editing and Xamarin Studio to run. However, after putting in my "Hello World" code into Xamarin, I literally am unable to click the play button on the top left hand corner.
Any ideas? I thought about reinstalling, how do I uninstall Xamarin Studio? What my code looks like.

Press on solution to expand it
Then select startup project by right click
If you still can't build, then you need to download Xamarin.Mac (since you're building on Mac, rather than on a mobile device) You can do that by launching installation, it will ask to re-download missing frameworks.

Related

Visual studio not giving Hints (intellisense) when i opening the c# scripts through unity,

I recently installed unity ,but I didn't install visual studio with it because I already have installed.
I simply opened unity and I goes to Edit > Preferences > External script editor and I selected Visual studio code . But when I opening my scripts, visual studio not giving hints for my c# code.
You probably need to install the appropriate targeting pack for Unity. That article also has some other helpful extensions to install when developing in Unity.
What you could do is just open it and close it.
What i mean by that is go to Assets > Open C# Project
Once VSCode opened, wait for 1 min, try to write something like Rigidbody.
If intellisense is working it will start giving you hints, if it's still not working
Do the process one more time,
You can refer to these pictures where how VSCode tells you whether Intellisense is working or not.
http://imgur.com/gallery/1YiuPA4
You need to install snippets for Unity in VS code.
Open VS code. Go to Extensions(ctrl+shift+X).
In search field you need to write unity
Then click to Unity Code Snippets and install it in window bellow.
Then you will be able to see Intelesence !

Struggling to get started in Visual Studio and Xcode - "undefined symbol _main"

I am a beginner when it comes to coding, and I have been struggling with a very annoying problem this entire day. I hope you can help me relieve this awful headache.
My idea is to create a very simple app for my Mac, so I downloaded Visual Studio and Xcode.
I followed this tutorial from Youtube to get started, but halfway in the film I see that I am not able to get the same "outputs" as this Youtuber gets ( https://youtu.be/rj_n4W_mDN0?t=340 ). In my case it doesn't automatically provide "NSTextField*LabelInfo", but I can attach the button and label to the script and make them show when I run Visual Studio.
I am not provided this autofill either ( https://youtu.be/rj_n4W_mDN0?t=420 ) or the option of calling the "HelloPressed" function in Visual Studio.
Then I discovered that I have an error message in Xcode when I try to build it: "undefined symbol _main" (which the Youtube person doesn't have).
It also reads:
"Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"_main", referenced from: implicit entry/start for main executable
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)"
I deleted my code and restarted the program, but the same message popped up. I deleted both Xcode and Visual Studio, and reinstalled it, but it still came up. This time I didn't add or do anything other than opening a new projects (in Cocoa app), and still I was greeted with this annoyance.
I see that my "Main.cs" in Visual Studio is not appearing in Xcode project (all the other ones are), but I don't know if this is relevant. I have tried to add different Frameworks to Xcode (AppKit), but I still receive this message. Maybe there is something I have to do in the Build section of Visual Studio, but I don't know what.
I have absolutely no clue what to do and how to proceed. I find it so strange and annoying that the Xcode gives me an Error without me doing anything else then starting up the program. My Macbook pro is very new so that cannot be the cause, the softwares are newly updated: Xcode 11.5 and Visual Studio 8.6.5 (build 23). I am programming in C sharp
I hope you are able to advice me in what to do. I am a beginner so I would appreciate easy-to-follow assistance or instructions.
Thank you very much,
August
Sorry I can't offer a definitive answer but hopefully the following will help you find your issue. I don't usually use VS for Mac and installed it just to see if I could figure out your issues. It is not as intuitive as one may like...
Visual Studio for Mac on both Mojave & Catalina does not work appear to work as the video you found seems to show.
Double-clicking on a .storyboard file generally seems to open the file in VS's XML editor rather than in Xcode. There might be a setting to control this somewhere. To open in Xcode right-click (or control-click) the file name and select Open With… -> Xcode Interface Builder in the menu that appears.
– Once over in Xcode you may find you have two open windows, one is just the .storyboard file and the other is a dummy Xcode project containing it. Close the first of these and just edit within the Xcode project window. If you don't do this you cannot create bindings between the controls and the source. If you look at the Xcode windows in the video you found you will see that when the bindings are being made it is in the project window, but there is nothing to show how/why that window opened up at the front.
Do not try to compile the "project" in Xcode. It is not meant to be compiled and appears to just be the bare minimum scaffolding required to enable VS to use Xcode for UI editing. All the errors you got are related to this.
Searching the internet for Visual Studio for Mac and storyboard files turns up plenty of hits and these files failing to open correctly seems a common problem from a scan of the titles. Do some research and you'll probably get it to work smoothly, but it does work as is albeit a little fiddly. HTH

Intellisense not working for new classes created in Unity [duplicate]

When I want to edit C# Unity scripts, they open in Visual Studio. It is supposed to provide auto complete for all Unity related code, but it doesn't work.
Here you can see the missing functionality:
As seen, the transform object does not open the autocomplete menu.
Unity version: 5.5.2f1
Visual studio 2015
Visual Studio Tools for Unity is installed
There is no auto-completion because the script says "Miscellaneous Files" instead of the of the name of the Project. Take a look at the image below that came from the video in your question:
The "Miscellaneous Files" message can happen for many reasons:
It can happen when you open your Unity C# file from another folder instead of opening it from Unity Editor.
This can also happen because Unity crashed while Visual Studio is still open therefore corrupting some files.
It can happen because Unity was closed then re-opened but is no longer connected to Visual Studio. When Visual Studio is opened you get "Miscellaneous Files" and no auto-completion.
This can happen when Visual Studio Tools for unity is not installed.
When you create a script from Unity then quickly open it before Unity finish processing it or before the round icon animation stuff finish animating.
Most of the times, restarting Unity and Visual Studio should fix this.
I can't tell which one is causing the problem but I will cover the most likely solution to fix this.
Fix Part 1:
Download and Install Visual Studio Tools for unity from this link. Do this while Unity and Visual Studio are both closed.
From Unity Editor, go to Edit → Preferences... → External Tools. On the External Script Editor drop down menu, change that to Visual Studio 2015.
Fix Part 2:
If newly created C# files are coming up as Miscellaneous then follow the instruction below:
From Visual Studio, go to Tools → Options... → Tools for Unity → Miscellaneous. Under Show connectivity icon, set it to true then restart Visual Studio.
When you re-start, connection icon should now be available in Visual Studio. Click it then choose the Unity instance to connect to. The red 'x' icon should now turn into a brown checkmark icon. Now, when you create a new C# file in Unity, it should open without saying Miscellaneous.
Fix Part 3:
Still not fixed?
Re-import project then open C# Project.
Close Visual Studio.
From Unity, re-import project by going to Assets → Reimport All.
Now, open the project in Visual Studio by going to Assets → Open C# Project. This will reload the project and fix possible solution file problems.
Fix Part 4:
Still not fixed?
Fix each C# file individually.
Click on Show All Files icon.
Select the script that doesn't do auto-complete then right-click and select Include In Project.
Fix Part 5:
Not fixed yet?
Credit goes to chrisvarnz for this particular solution which seems to have worked for multiple people.
Close Visual Studio
Go your project directory and delete all the generated Visual Studio files.
These are the files extensions to delete:
.csproj
.user
.sln
Example:
Let's say that the name of your Project is called Target_Shoot, these are what the files to delete should look like:
Target_Shoot.csproj
Target_Shoot.Editor.csproj
Target_Shoot.Editor.csproj.user
Target_Shoot.Player.csproj
Target_Shoot.Player.csproj.user
Target_Shoot.sln
Do not delete anything else.
Double click on the script again from Unity which should generate new Visual Studio file then open Visual Studio. This may solve your problem.
Fix Part 6:
If not working, check if you are having this error:
The "GetReferenceNearestTargetFrameworkTask" task was not found
Install Nuget PackageManager from here.
Restart Visual Studio.
See this answer for more information.
Fix Part 7
Make sure all of the projects are loaded.
In Solution Explorer it should tell you # of # projects.
If all of the projects are not showing, right click on "Solution (# of # projects)" and click Load Projects.
Try this,
In Unity Editor Go to Menu, Click on Edit -> Preferences -> External Tools -> External Script Editor. Set it to Visual Studio (your installed version of VS).
Now in Menubar go to Edit -> Project Settings -> Player Settings -> Other Settings -> Under Configuration -> Check API Compatibility Level -> Change it to your installed .Net version. In my case I set it to .Net 4.x
Now if Visual Studio is running already go to Visual Studio, it will ask to reload project. Reload the project. Check if it works, if not close Visual Studio. Now Open cs file from Unity Editor, and now it should work.
I found another way to fix this issue in a more convenient manner:
Select the broken file in Solution Explorer.
Open its Properties.
Switch field "Build Action" from "Compile" to "None".
Then switch it back to "Compile".
This will kill the synchronization between Unity and Visual Studio somehow.
The next time Visual Studio will reload the project, it will prompt a warning.
Just click on "Discard".
If you have done all of the above and still isn't working , just try this:
Note: you should have updated VS.
Goto Unity > edit> preference >External tools> external script editor.
Somehow for me I had not selected "visual studio" for external script editor and it was not working. As soon as i selected this and doubled clicked on c# file from unity it started working.
I hope it helps you too.
Unload and reload the project, in Visual Studio:
right click your project in Solution Explorer
select Unload Project
select Reload Project
Fixed!
I found this solution to work the best (easiest), having run into the problem multiple times.
Source: https://alexdunn.org/2017/04/26/xamarin-tips-fixing-the-highlighting-drop-in-your-xamarin-android-projects/
This page helped me fix the issue.
Fix for Unity disconnected from Visual Studio
In the Unity Editor, select the Edit > Preferences menu.
Select the External Tools tab on the left.
For External Script Editor, Choose the Visual Studio version you have.
Click regenerate Files
You Done
Select project in Visual Studio
Click "Refresh" button
I hit the same issues today using Visual Studio 2017 15.4.5 with Unity 2017.
I was able to fix the issue by right clicking on the project in Visual Studio and changing the target framework from 3.5 to 4.5.
Hope this helps anyone else in a similar scenario.
Two Alternative Options:
Fix 1
#singleton pointed me in this direction. Instead of changing the target in Visual Studio you should change it in Unity since the project is auto-generated.
First delete the auto generated Visual Studio files:
.csproj
.user
.sln
Then from within Unity go to PlayerSettings and under 'Other Settings' change the 'Scripting Runtime Version' from Stable 3.5 to Experimental 4.6.
However, that didn't fix it for me.
Fix 2
I noticed all of the references to Unity related code was marked with a yellow warning. Check your error logs and see if this is the case. In particular see if you get the following error: getreferenceNearestTargetframeworkTask
If so try:
Start Visual Studio Installer again.
On the Build Tools 2017, click Modify,
Ensure that "Nuget targets and build tasks" are ticked. This should become ticked if you click on Universal Windows Platform development.
Update 2020 with Visual Studio Community 2019 and Unity 2019.3:
Open Visual Studio Installer as Administrator, select to modify your current installation and add "Game development for Unity"
If you add a new c# script in Unity now, and open it (automatically) with Visual Studio, it is not described as "Miscellaneous" at the top of the window but with "Assembly-CSharp", and the autocomplete works.
i found my solution by creating the .cs file from visual studio itself instead of unity editor
right click on project folder in solution explorer
add > new item
type "unity" on the search field on the top right
select "CSharp MonoBehaviour"
name your script on the bottom and click Add
In my case, correct .net version was not installed on my PC. I install the .net 3.5 on my pc and that worked for me.
For Windows or macOS:
Download/Install the Visual Studio IDE (with Unity Tools)
When installing, make sure you include installation of
Game development with Unity
Then using Unity (you can double click one of your C# files), open a new C# project and the Visual Studio IDE should open with your new project structure.
From there, you should be able to see what you are looking for.
For example:
For Linux (suggestion):
Try Monodevelop - Additional Information, it provides code completion/hints.
My autocomplete also didn't work because Visual Studio Tools for Unity wasn't installed. So, after you install that, delete the auto generated Visual Studio files. Others said that you open file again and the problem is solved but it's not.
The trick is: instead of normally double-clicking the file, you need to open the C# file from Unity by right click and then "Open C# Project".
The issue I faced was that the C# Project was targeting a different .NET Framework (4.7.2), whereas the Unity project had a different target (.NET 3.5).
I fixed this by changing the target in Unity as-
File -> Build Settings -> Player Settings -> Other Settings -> API
Compatibility Level : Set it to the .NET version you already have
installed (Check your .NET Version here). In my case, it was 4.x
After this, Visual Studio worked perfectly and autocorrect was fixed too.
Try pressing Ctrl + Alt + Space (which toggles between suggestion and standard completion modes)
For some odd reason, the "Game development with Unity" tool can become disabled in Visual Studio.
To fix this..
Open Visual Studio
Go to Extensions → "Manage Extensions" → Installed
Find "Visual Studio 2019 Tools for Unity"
If it is disabled, enable it
Restart VS
Credit to Yuli Levtov's answer on another Thread
The following works for me.
Go to Edit->Preferences->External Tools->External Script Editor Select Scripting Editor
I solved to install the same version of .NET on WIN that was configured in my Unity project. (Player Settings)
Go to Options on the Tools menu and then select Documents in the Environment node. (If Documents does not appear in the list, select Show all settings in the Options dialog box.)
Put a tick on "Miscellaneous files in Solution Explorer" and Click OK. (This option displays the "Miscellaneous Files" node in Solution Explorer. Miscellaneous files are files that are not associated with a project or solution but can appear in Solution Explorer for your convenience if you tick this option.)
Locate your file in the Solution Explorer under "Miscellaneous Files". Then drag and drop your file to where it should belong and voila! This will copy the file to where you drop it. You may now safely delete the older file under Miscellaneous Files folder if you wish to do so
Credits: https://stackoverflow.com/a/47662523/10471480
In case Scripts folder is not visible:
Click on "Show all files" in Solution Explorer
Locate the Scripts folder.
Right Click on Scripts and select "Include in Project"
Keep in mind that if you are using the ReSharper tool, it will override the IntelliSense and show it's own. To change that, on VS, go to Extensions -> ReSharper -> Options -> IntelliSense -> General then choose Visual Studio and not ReSharper.
Before restarting and/or re-installing VS, First try opening any other of your projects to see if Intellisence works, if it does, then issue probably lies with your current project. First, most probable victim would be the NUGET packages with pending updates. To Fix this,
Right click on references
Proceed to Manage NUGET Packages Under NUGET Packages
proceed to updates Install Updates and recheck Intellisence
I tried all of these but ended up finding out that I needed to right-click the solution in Solution Explorer and add existing items and find the C# assembly file in Window's Explorer. There seem to be a bazillion different problems that give you this error, this is likely the most simple solution. If you double click on your script from unity, it does not seem to drag the assembly along.
Another possible fix:
In the project window, click on the Assets folder
Right click, and Create -> C# Script
Double click that, and wait.
For some reason, this work.
None of the above solutions worked for me. However I opened the ProjectName.CSPROJ file and manually added the new file and it worked like charm
What worked me is that I copied all the code inside the broken class and removed that file.
Then, I opened an empty file with the same name and pasted back.
Result: beautiful syntax highlights came back!
"Preferences" -> "External tools" -> set you exteranl tool
Thats one fix. Also for VS you can use ReSharper by JetBrains, but I recommend use Rider. That one is also free for students.
It provides less performance than visual studio, but more than VS+Resharper definitely.
Have a good day, mate)
Try with combination: Ctrl + Alt + Space
one of the above methods are worked for me and I just found a solution to this problem,
1. First, go to the project directory and delete .sln file
2. Second, go to unity and double click your script. Then Visual Studio will be open with an error,
Then click ok and close Visual Studio editor.
Finally, turn off your Windows Defender and then go to your project directory and there will be .csproj file. Just double click and open this from your Visual Studio editor and open the scripts folder inside the assets folder and open the scripts and autocompletion will be working perfectly fine.
These actions solved the problem for my projects in Visual Studio 2022
FIX 1
Solution
Assembly-CSharp (right-click)
Load Entire Dependency Tree
FIX 2
Solution
Assembly-CSharp
References
Double click on any lib to force loading

The operation CreateSession failed due to an internal error: Could not initialize class mono.android..D3DImageFactory

Click this image to show error
I am new to Xamarin . I want tO learn xamarin. I have following installation on my machine.
1. Visual Studio Community 2017
2. Xamarin latest
I have updated the Android SDK 25 but still getting the error.
Make sure that Visual Studio is pointing to the 64-bit version of the JDK rather than 32-bit.
Select Tools > Options from the top menu and scroll all the way to the bottom on the left hand side list and open Xamarin > Android Settings. In there you should change the first item, "Java Development Kit Location" as highlighted in the picture below.
In your case it's probably pointing to a folder in Program Files (x86). Try to find the Java\jdkx.x.x_xxx folder in Program Files\ instead like you can see in the picture.
After making the change, close the axml designer and reload the file. It should work after that.

What is the proper way of installing Xamarin because I am getting an error every time that I try to start

I am trying to develop my first Android/iOS app using Xamarin, however every time that I try to create a new project and open up the Main.axml in the Resources -> Layout folders, I get an error stating that "Something went wrong"
Something Went Wrong
I have tried re-installing Visual Studio as well as Xamarin but I have had no luck. Any help is greatly appreciated!
Install the Android SDK. You can get it from here
If you have already installed the Android SDK, you might need to (Inside Visual Studio) go to Tools -> Options, in the left side on that new window that opens Expand Xamarin. Click on Android Settings and Make sure all the Locations are set for Java Development, Android SDK, and NDK Location. Point your Android SDK location to where you installed it.

Categories

Resources