-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 4.7k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Implement .NET Swift interop support targeting Apple platforms #95638
Comments
Tagging subscribers to this area: @dotnet/area-meta Issue DetailsOverviewThe Swift programming language has a different ABI, runtime environment, and object model, making it challenging to call into from the .NET runtime. The goal is to establish .NET Interop support in the ecosystem and address Swift ABI differences. Apple's shift towards Swift highlights the importance of Maui being compatible with Swift libraries and frameworks to remain relevant in the Apple ecosystem. Ideally, the interop should operate with a minimal set of additional wrappers and enable direct calls to various Swift functions. This project can be divided into at least three separate areas and therefore potentially three separate workstreams. Runtime: At the lowest level, ensuring that Swift can be called from .NET without an intermediate step through C or assembly is essential. This task must be implemented across all supported .NET runtimes targeting OSX and Apple mobile platforms. Code-Generation: This layer involves the generation of C# bindings for Swift. The projection tooling consists of importing Swift into .NET, exporting .NET to Swift, and tool distribution. End-user scenarios: At the highest level, it is crucial to address end-user scenarios. For instance, a MAUI-iOS developer should be able to create an iOS app that interacts seamlessly with Swift libraries and frameworks. The primary task at this level includes defining and managing the end-to-end process. This includes prioritizing Swift libraries and showcasing the support for .NET Swift interop. User stories
|
Tagging subscribers to 'os-ios': @steveisok, @akoeplinger, @kotlarmilos Issue DetailsOverviewThe Swift programming language has a different ABI, runtime environment, and object model, making it challenging to call into from the .NET runtime. The goal is to establish .NET Interop support in the ecosystem and address Swift ABI differences. Apple's shift towards Swift highlights the importance of Maui being compatible with Swift libraries and frameworks to remain relevant in the Apple ecosystem. Ideally, the interop should operate with a minimal set of additional wrappers and enable direct calls to various Swift functions. This project can be divided into at least three separate areas and therefore potentially three separate workstreams. Runtime: At the lowest level, ensuring that Swift can be called from .NET without an intermediate step through C or assembly is essential. This task must be implemented across all supported .NET runtimes targeting OSX and Apple mobile platforms. Code-Generation: This layer involves the generation of C# bindings for Swift. The projection tooling consists of importing Swift into .NET, exporting .NET to Swift, and tool distribution. End-user scenarios: At the highest level, it is crucial to address end-user scenarios. For instance, a MAUI-iOS developer should be able to create an iOS app that interacts seamlessly with Swift libraries and frameworks. The primary task at this level includes defining and managing the end-to-end process. This includes prioritizing Swift libraries and showcasing the support for .NET Swift interop. User stories
|
Sorry for the interruption, but macOS is not |
Thanks for your suggestion. The label description mentions |
Mixing macOS and Apple seems odd. What about just naming explicitly macOS and iOS ? |
macCatalyst and tvOS too We call these "Apple platforms" in many places in the repo, one example from many
|
@jkotas These platforms have differences in available frameworks. If there is a dotNET equivalent of Swift |
Overview
The Swift programming language has a different ABI, runtime environment, and object model, making it challenging to call into from the .NET runtime. The goal is to establish .NET Interop support in the ecosystem and address Swift ABI differences. Apple's shift towards Swift highlights the importance of Maui being compatible with Swift libraries and frameworks to remain relevant in the Apple ecosystem. Ideally, the interop should operate with a minimal set of additional wrappers and enable direct calls to various Swift functions.
This project can be divided into at least three separate areas and therefore potentially three separate workstreams.
Runtime: At the lowest level, ensuring that Swift can be called from .NET without an intermediate step through C or assembly is essential. This task must be implemented across all supported .NET runtimes targeting macOS and Apple mobile platforms.
Code-Generation: This layer involves the generation of C# bindings for Swift. The projection tooling consists of importing Swift into .NET, exporting .NET to Swift, and tool distribution.
End-user scenarios: At the highest level, it is crucial to address end-user scenarios. For instance, a MAUI-iOS developer should be able to create an iOS app that interacts seamlessly with Swift libraries and frameworks. The primary task at this level includes defining and managing the end-to-end process. This includes prioritizing Swift libraries and showcasing the support for .NET Swift interop.
User stories
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: