Introducing .NET MAUI – One Codebase, Many Platforms

David Ortinau

Welcome to .NET Multi-platform App UI. This release marks a new milestone in our multi-year journey to unify the .NET platform. Now you and over 5 million other .NET developers have a first-class, cross-platform UI stack targeting Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows to complement the .NET toolchain (SDK) and base class library (BCL). You can build anything with .NET.

Join us at Microsoft Build 2022 where we’ll give you a tour of all the updates for building native apps for any device with .NET and Visual Studio. » Learn more.

This is just the beginning of our journey to create a desktop and mobile app experience that delights .NET developers. For the next phase, the foundation is now established for the broader .NET ecosystem to bring plugins, libraries, and services from .NET Framework and the old project system to .NET 6 and SDK style projects. Among those available today are:

syncfusion controls for dot net maui telerik controls for dot net maui
DevExpress controls for dot net maui grial kit controls for .NET MAUI
AndroidX AlohaKit CommunityToolkit.MVVM CommunityToolkit.Maui CommunityToolkit MauiCompat CommunityToolkit Markup.MauiCompat DevExpress Facebook FreshMvvm.Maui Google APIs for iOS Google Play Services Client Libraries GrialKit MauiAnimation Microsoft.Maui.Graphics MR.Gestures Prism.Maui Plugin.Fingerprint Plugin.InAppBilling Plugin.StoreReview Plugin.ValidationRules ReactiveUI.Maui Shiny SkiaSharp Syncfusion Telerik UI for .NET MAUI TemplateUI User Dialogs

For help moving libraries to .NET 6, check out the recent guest blog posts detailing experiences shipping .NET MAUI libraries from Michael Rumpler (MR.Gestures) and Luis Matos (Plugin.ValidationRules).

The .NET MAUI workload is fully supported under the Current release schedule of 18 months, and will be serviced at the same monthly cadence as .NET. Our ongoing focus for .NET MAUI continues to be quality, resolving known issues and prioritizing issues based on your feedback. This also includes the workloads we ship for building applications that exclusively target Android, Android Wear, CarPlay, iOS, macOS, and tvOS directly using the native toolkits from .NET, and the supporting libraries AndroidX, Facebook, Firebase, Google Play Services, and SkiaSharp.

With .NET MAUI you can achieve no-compromise user experiences while sharing more code than ever before. .NET MAUI uses native UI via the premier app toolkits provided by each platform, modern developer productivity, and our fastest mobile platform yet.

Native UI, No Compromise

The primary goal of .NET MAUI is to enable you to deliver the best app experience as designed specially by each platform (Android, iOS, macOS, Windows, and Tizen thanks to collaboration with Samsung), while enabling you to craft consistent brand experiences through rich styling and graphics. Out of the box, each platform looks and behaves the way it should without any additional widgets or styling required to mimic. For example, .NET MAUI on Windows is backed by WinUI 3 the premier native UI component that ships with the Windows App SDK.

app UI on all four supported platforms

Use C# and XAML to build your apps from a rich toolkit of more than 40 controls, layouts, and pages. Upon the Xamarin shoulders of mobile controls, .NET MAUI adds support for multi-window desktop applications, menu bars, and new animation capabilities, borders, corners, shadows, graphics, and more. Oh, and the new BlazorWebView which I’ll highlight below.

Image controls sample png

Read more in the .NET MAUI documentation about controls: pages, layouts, and views.

Accessibility First

One major advantage of using native UI is the inherited accessibility support that we can build upon with semantic services to make it easier than ever to create highly accessible applications. We have worked closely with customers to redesign how we develop for accessibility. From these conversations we have designed .NET MAUI semantic services for controlling:

  • Properties such as description, hint, and heading level
  • Focus
  • Screen reader
  • Automation properties

Read more in the .NET MAUI documentation about semantic services for accessibility.

Beyond UI

.NET MAUI provides simple APIs to access services and features of each platform such as accelerometer, app actions, file system, notifications, and so much more. In this example, we configure “app actions” that add menu options to the app icon on each platform:

AppActions.SetAsync(
    new AppAction("current_info", "Check Current Weather", icon: "current_info"),
    new AppAction("add_location", "Add a Location", icon: "add_location")
);

Image platform integrations png

Read more in the .NET MAUI documentation about accessing platform services and features.

Easily Customized

Whether you’re extending the capabilities of .NET MAUI controls or establishing new platform functionality, .NET MAUI is architected for extensibility, so you never hit a wall. Take, for example, the Entry control – a canonical example of a control that renders differently on one platform. Android draws an underline below the text field, and developers often want to remove that underline. With .NET MAUI, customizing every Entry in your entire project is just a few lines of code:

#if ANDROID
Microsoft.Maui.Handlers.EntryHandler.Mapper.ModifyMapping("NoUnderline", (h, v) =>
{
    h.PlatformView.BackgroundTintList = ColorStateList.ValueOf(Colors.Transparent.ToPlatform());
});
#endif

android default entry control compared to a styled entry control

Here is a great recent example of creating a new Map platform control by Cayas Software. The blog post demonstrates creating a handler for the control, implementation for each platform, and then making the control available by registering it in .NET MAUI.

.ConfigureMauiHandlers(handlers =>
{
    handlers.AddHandler(typeof(MapHandlerDemo.Maps.Map),typeof(MapHandler));
})

Image maui maps png

Read more in the .NET MAUI documentation about customizing controls with handlers

Modern Developer Productivity

More than being a technology that can build anything, we want .NET to also accelerate your productivity using common language features, patterns and practices, and tooling.

.NET MAUI uses the new C# 10 features introduced in .NET 6, including global using statements and file scoped namespaces – great for reducing clutter and cruft in your files. And .NET MAUI takes multi-targeting to a new level with “single project” focus.

Image code side by side png

In new .NET MAUI projects, the platforms are nestled away in a subfolder giving focus to your application where you spend the majority of your effort. Within your project’s Resources folder you have a single place to manage your app’s fonts, images, app icon, splash screen, raw assets, and styling. .NET MAUI will do the work to optimize them for each platform’s unique requirements.

solution explorer showing platform and resources folders

Multi-project vs Single project Structuring your solution with Individual projects for each platform is still supported, so you can choose when the single project approach is appropriate for your applications.

.NET MAUI uses the builder pattern made popular with Microsoft.Extensions libraries in ASP.NET and Blazor applications as a single place to initialize and configure your app. From here, you can provide .NET MAUI with your fonts, tap into platform specific lifecycle events, configure dependencies, enable specific features, enable vendor control toolkits, and more.

public static class MauiProgram
{
    public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
    {
        var builder = MauiApp.CreateBuilder();
        builder
            .UseMauiApp<App>()
            .ConfigureServices()
            .ConfigureFonts(fonts =>
            {
                fonts.AddFont("Segoe-Ui-Bold.ttf", "SegoeUiBold");
                fonts.AddFont("Segoe-Ui-Regular.ttf", "SegoeUiRegular");
                fonts.AddFont("Segoe-Ui-Semibold.ttf", "SegoeUiSemibold");
                fonts.AddFont("Segoe-Ui-Semilight.ttf", "SegoeUiSemilight");
            });

        return builder.Build();
    }
}
public static class ServicesExtensions
{
    public static MauiAppBuilder ConfigureServices(this MauiAppBuilder builder)
    {
        builder.Services.AddMauiBlazorWebView();
        builder.Services.AddSingleton<SubscriptionsService>();
        builder.Services.AddSingleton<ShowsService>();
        builder.Services.AddSingleton<ListenLaterService>();
#if WINDOWS
        builder.Services.TryAddSingleton<SharedMauiLib.INativeAudioService, SharedMauiLib.Platforms.Windows.NativeAudioService>();
#elif ANDROID
        builder.Services.TryAddSingleton<SharedMauiLib.INativeAudioService, SharedMauiLib.Platforms.Android.NativeAudioService>();
#elif MACCATALYST
        builder.Services.TryAddSingleton<SharedMauiLib.INativeAudioService, SharedMauiLib.Platforms.MacCatalyst.NativeAudioService>();
        builder.Services.TryAddSingleton< Platforms.MacCatalyst.ConnectivityService>();
#elif IOS
        builder.Services.TryAddSingleton<SharedMauiLib.INativeAudioService, SharedMauiLib.Platforms.iOS.NativeAudioService>();
#endif

        builder.Services.TryAddTransient<WifiOptionsService>();
        builder.Services.TryAddSingleton<PlayerService>();

        builder.Services.AddScoped<ThemeInterop>();
        builder.Services.AddScoped<ClipboardInterop>();
        builder.Services.AddScoped<ListenTogetherHubClient>(_ =>
            new ListenTogetherHubClient(Config.ListenTogetherUrl));


        return builder;
    }
}

Read more in the .NET MAUI documentation about app startup with MauiProgram and single project.

Bringing Blazor to Desktop and Mobile

.NET MAUI is also great for web developers looking to get in on the action with native client apps. .NET MAUI integrates with Blazor, so you can reuse existing Blazor web UI components directly in native mobile and desktop apps. With .NET MAUI and Blazor, you can reuse your web development skills to build cross-platform native client apps, and build a single UI that spans mobile, desktop, and web.

.NET MAUI Blazor on mobile, desktop, and web

.NET MAUI executes your Blazor components natively on the device (no WebAssembly needed) and renders them to an embedded web view control. Because your Blazor components compile and execute in the .NET process, they aren’t limited to the web platform and can leverage any native platform feature, like notifications, Bluetooth, geo-location and sensors, filesystem, and so much more. You can even add native UI controls alongside your Blazor web UI. This is an all new kind of hybrid app: Blazor Hybrid!

Getting started with .NET MAUI and Blazor is easy: just use the included .NET MAUI Blazor App project template.

.NET MAUI Blazor app template

This template is all setup so you can start building a .NET MAUI Blazor app using HTML, CSS, and C#. The Blazor Hybrid tutorial for .NET MAUI will walk you through building and running your first .NET MAUI Blazor app.

Or add a BlazorWebView control to an existing .NET MAUI app wherever you want to start using Blazor components:

<BlazorWebView HostPage="wwwroot/index.html">
    <BlazorWebView.RootComponents>
        <RootComponent Selector="#app" ComponentType="{x:Type my:Counter}" />
    </BlazorWebView.RootComponents>
</BlazorWebView>

Blazor Hybrid support is also now available for WPF and Windows Forms so you can start modernizing your existing desktop apps to run on the web or to run cross platform with .NET MAUI. The BlazorWebView controls for WPF and Windows Forms are available on NuGet. Check out the Blazor Hybrid tutorials for WPF and Windows Forms to learn how to get started.

To learn more about Blazor Hybrid support for .NET MAUI, WPF, and Windows forms, check out the Blazor Hybrid docs.

Optimized for Speed

.NET MAUI is designed for performance. You have told us how critical it is for your applications to start as quickly as possible, especially on Android. The UI controls in .NET MAUI implement a thin, decoupled handler-mapper pattern over the native platform controls. This reduces the number of layers in the rendering of UI and simplifies control customization.

The layouts in .NET MAUI have been architected to use a consistent manager pattern that optimizes the measure and arrange loops to more quickly render and update your UI. We have also surfaced layouts pre-optimized for specific scenarios such as HorizontalStackLayout and VerticalStackLayout in addition to StackLayout.

From the very beginning of this journey, we set a goal to improve startup performance and maintain or reduce app size as we transitioned to .NET 6. At the time of GA, we’ve achieved a 34.9% improvement for .NET MAUI and 39.4% improvement in .NET for Android. Those gains extend to complex apps as well; the .NET Podcast sample application began with a startup of 1299ms and at GA measures 814.2ms, a 37.3% improvement since Preview 13.

The settings are enabled by default to provide a release build with these optimizations.

Image android release settings

Stay tuned for a deep-dive blog post on what we have done to achieve these results.

Get Started Today

To get started using .NET MAUI on Windows, install or update Visual Studio 2022 Preview to version 17.3 Preview 1.1. In the installer, choose the workload “.NET Multi-platform App UI development”.

dot net maui workload in visual studio installer

To use .NET MAUI on Mac, install the new Visual Studio 2022 preview for Mac (17.3 Preview 1).

Visual Studio 2022 will GA .NET MAUI tooling support later this year. On Windows today you can accelerate your dev loop with XAML and .NET Hot Reload, and powerful editors for XAML, C#, Razor, and CSS among others. Using the XAML Live Preview and Live Visual Tree, you can preview, align, inspect your UI, and edit it while debugging. .NET MAUI’s new single project experience now includes project property pages for a visual editing experience to configure your apps with multi-platform targeting.

On Mac, you can today load single project and multi-project .NET MAUI solutions to debug with a beautiful, new native Visual Studio 2022 for Mac experience. Other features for enhancing your productivity developing .NET MAUI applications will ship in subsequent previews.

We recommend getting started updating your libraries to .NET MAUI and creating new .NET MAUI projects today. Before diving headlong into converting Xamarin projects to .NET MAUI, review your dependencies, the state of Visual Studio support for .NET MAUI, and the published known issues to identify the right time to transition. Keep in mind that Xamarin will continue to be supported under the modern lifecycle policy, which states 2 years from the last major release.

Resources

We need your feedback

We’d love to hear from you! As you encounter any issues, file a report on GitHub at dotnet/maui.

Summary

With .NET MAUI, you can build native applications for Android, iOS, macOS, Tizen, and Windows from a single codebase using the same productivity patterns practiced all across .NET. The thin and decoupled UI and layout architecture of .NET MAUI together with single project features enable you to stay focused on one application instead of juggling the unique needs of multiple platforms. And with .NET 6, we’re shipping performance improvements not only for Android, but all across the breadth of platform targets.

Less platform code, more shared code, consistent standards and patterns, lightweight and performant architecture, mobile and desktop native experiences – this is just the beginning. We look forward to seeing libraries and the broader ecosystem come alongside .NET MAUI in the following months to define a new era of cross-platform application development for .NET developers that empowers you and your organization to achieve more.

135 comments

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  • Vassilios Pallis 0

    This is so disappointing and embarrassing.
    We were waiting for so long to get a “GA Ready” version that only runs with Visual Studio 2022 RC.
    Why is it so difficult to make it run on Visual Studio 2022 RTM?
    Come on guys, this is not serious.

    • David OrtinauMicrosoft employee 0

      We understand not everyone is able to install and use preview versions for work though it does run side-by-side with GA versions of Visual Studio. .NET MAUI support will soon be available in Visual Studio GA. This isn’t a difficulty issue, but one of ensuring quality and completeness so when it does GA you get the experience that you need and expect. Appreciate your patience.

  • Waldemar Cichon 0

    Hi David,

    using the Visual Code from 2007 and the predecessors of VS for Mac since 2010 show, how I like those platforms. I like also Forms and now MAUI and especially also the new VS 2022. I’m using VS mostly on a Mac, but until now I cannot create a MAUI app directly from the IDE. I know the command line way but reading your text it should be possible also to create a MAUI app directly from the IDE as suggested in the blog entry? Im using the today installed Pre 17.3 (139)

    • Waldemar Cichon 0

      Found the solution – the workload must be installed manually, this is not made by the installer. Please add this feature.

      Regards

      Waldemar

      • anonymous 0

        this comment has been deleted.

      • John 0

        It is included in the installer, but I had to manually uninstall VSforMac preview first.

  • ロックマン X 0

    Xamarin MAUI will also support NFC cards?

  • Sebastian Kruse 0

    Why is Acr.UserDialogs listed here as a library for MAUI? The author stopped the support for it in early 2021 and as of now, it won’t work fully in a MAUI project.

  • Rod Macdonald 0

    I have an old WinForms project using the .NET Framework and wondered if I could add Blazor to it? I’m confused because it seems WinForms needs to use .NET Core to be able to do this which I assume means I would need to re-write my WinForms app in Core, and were I to go to that length, it wouldn’t make sense to go down the WinForms route. Clearly I’m missing something, please can you advise the direction. Thank you.

  • Ben Phung 0

    Great 🙂 Could you tell when an Intune App SDK for MAUI is available?

  • Vassilios Pallis 0

    Sadly, .NET MAUI is not ready yet.
    Until Visual Studio 2022 RTM support, it’s a long way to come…
    (Later this year = December?)

  • Filip Procházka 0

    Any estimated date when MAUI will be possible to built and publish as an executable app without using MSIX Packaging Tool?
    According to the https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/maui/windows/deployment/overview. It’s not possible for now: “.NET MAUI currently only allows publishing an MSIX package. You can’t yet publish a Windows executable file for distribution.”
    https://github.com/dotnet/maui/issues/4329

  • Viktor Arbuzov 0

    one code base – many problems =(
    1.2k issues are opened on MAUI repo.
    everything is broken.

    • maharshi choudhury 0

      My upvote to that

  • Vassily Godunov 0

    Community support will be limited as long as you fundamentally reject cross-platform WPF and GTK.
    There are no objective reasons for such a policy. Voluntary only.
    The link to SkiaSharp looks like a mockery.
    So far, MAUI remains an exclusively mobile platform and I personally have no interest in it.

    • maharshi choudhury 0

      My upvote to that

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