

The Final Xamarin Podcast, James Montemagno and David Ortinau So when you go install Visual Studio in a future release, this isn’t there. Part of the Visual Studio installer experience. The good news is jumping to the other side, the very familiar experience. The only thing it’s not going to do for you is get your Android emulators, your iOS, Xcode installed, and some of those other third party dependencies, but in terms of all the net things it’s going to do that for you.

Install command and pass Maui as the workload ID and it will go out and grab all the SDK’s that you need to be able to run a Maui application. So if you are a command line junkie and you really, really enjoy getting getting your fingers dirty with the keystrokes, then this is for you so you can do a network load.

So with the net installer, you can actually install optional workloads, of which Maui is now one.
#UNINSTALL VISUAL STUDIO COMMUNITY MAC MAC OS#
So we are now what do we call a network load? This is it’s all backed by Nougat in that Nougat is the infrastructure by which we deliver all of our installs for Android, iOS, Mac OS as well as Maui Blazer and all that sort of thing. Update: I create a new post Install MAUI with Visual Studio 2022 (Preview) after Microsoft released Visual Studio 2022 and a new preview of MAUI.įirst of all, in my point of view, the most important question is: is Xamarin dead? Just few days ago, James Montemagno released the final Xamarin Podcast and they said:
