C#

C# (pronounced "C sharp") is a simple, modern, object-oriented, and type-safe programming language.
Its roots in the C family of languages makes C# immediately familiar to C, C++, and Java programmers.
Here are 54,811 public repositories matching this topic...
Building the best file manager experience for Windows
-
Updated
Feb 6, 2023 - C#
ShareX is a free and open source program that lets you capture or record any area of your screen and share it with a single press of a key. It also allows uploading images, text or other types of files to many supported destinations you can choose from.
-
Updated
Jan 31, 2023 - C#
-
Updated
Feb 6, 2023 - Java
Bitmap & tilemap generation from a single example with the help of ideas from quantum mechanics
-
Updated
Jan 3, 2023 - C#
This repo is used for servicing PR's for .NET Core 2.1 and 3.1. Please visit us at https://github.com/dotnet/runtime
-
Updated
Jan 21, 2023
-
Updated
Feb 5, 2023 - C#
The Roslyn .NET compiler provides C# and Visual Basic languages with rich code analysis APIs.
-
Updated
Feb 6, 2023 - C#
Pulumi - Universal Infrastructure as Code. Your Cloud, Your Language, Your Way
-
Updated
Feb 4, 2023 - Go
ANTLR (ANother Tool for Language Recognition) is a powerful parser generator for reading, processing, executing, or translating structured text or binary files.
-
Updated
Feb 3, 2023 - Java
A Swiss Army knife for developers.
-
Updated
Feb 6, 2023 - C#
-
Updated
Feb 1, 2023 - C#
Open Source real-time strategy game engine for early Westwood games such as Command & Conquer: Red Alert written in C# using SDL and OpenGL. Runs on Windows, Linux, *BSD and Mac OS X.
-
Updated
Feb 5, 2023 - C#
Clean Architecture Solution Template: A starting point for Clean Architecture with ASP.NET Core
-
Updated
Jan 30, 2023 - C#
The core infrastructure backend (API, database, Docker, etc).
-
Updated
Feb 6, 2023 - C#
-
Updated
Feb 6, 2023 - TypeScript
Created by Anders Hejlsberg
Released January 2002
- Repository
- dotnet/csharplang
- Website
- docs.microsoft.com/dotnet/csharp
- Wikipedia
- Wikipedia