Microsoft .NET (original) (raw)
The .NET (note capitalization) initiative is a Microsoft project to create a new software development platform focused on network transparency, platform independence, and rapid application development.
The Strategy
First, .NET is a strategic initiative, seen by some as a way for Microsoft to come to dominate the Internet the way it does the desktop and other computing devices.
The Enterprise Infrastructure
Second, .NET is a software platform, which was released in 2002. It presents a platform-independent target for software development, with many built-in features including Internet integration and features intended to enhance security. It relies fully on the software componentry and component-oriented programming paradigms. In this respect it largely replaces the former component object model (COM).
- The Common Language Infrastructure (CLI) is a virtual machine and a standard class library (the Common Language Runtime which is designed to be independent of both programming languages and operating systems). The virtual machine executes the Microsoft Intermediate Language (MSIL) assembly.
- Access to components written in other languages and the underlying Microsoft Windows platform
- Web services using the SOAP
Supporting Products
Third, .NET is a collection of development environments and software packages that are new versions of existing Microsoft products geared toward the .NET platform, including a more advanced Visual Studio.
.NET Languages
The CLI is designed to provide support for any object-oriented programming language, sharing a common object model and a large common class library.
Microsoft and other vendors provide .NET versions of many languages, including:
- C# programming language, an object-oriented language similar to Sun's Java
- Visual Basic .NET, an improved, object-oriented, multi-threaded version of the classic Visual Basic programming language
- Managed C++, a variant of the C++ programming language for the .NET platform
- JScript .NET, a compiled version of Microsoft's JScript, quite similar to ECMAScript
- Lexico, a didactic in Spanish objects oriented language.
- Delphi 7 includes a preview compiler for .NET, but the next release (possibly called Delphi for .NET) will have more complete support for .NET
- COBOL
- Perl
- Python
- Mercury
- Objective Pascal
- F sharp programming language
- Lisp
- Forth
- J#, a Java and J++ (the Microsoft variant of Java) .NET transitional language
Notes:
- many of these compilers are free (the vendors sell IDEss).
- most languages have significant adjustments to fit into the .NET Framework. The vendors have often used this as an excuse to vary other features of the languages at the same time.
The Microsoft support resource MSDN is emphasizing the .NET languages.
.NET vs. J2EE
The CLI, the MSIL and C# have similarities to Sun Microsystems' Java Virtual Machine and Sun's Java, hence they are fierce competitors. Both use their own intermediate bytecode. .NET is currently only fully available on Windows platforms, whereas Java is available on many platforms. Sun's product, J2EE, has been on the market longer, and has strong component structure.
.NET vs. COM
The previous software component technology endorsed by Microsoft for large-scale software systems was the Component object model or COM. While .NET may wrap COM-objects and vice versa, it has been clearly stated by Microsoft that .NET will eventually replace COM as a software component architecture. New applications addressing the Win32 platform should not use COM, but .NET.
Standardization and Open Source
Microsoft has submitted a part of the specifications of .NET to ECMA and ISO for standardization. This is a calculated risk, but it may encourage standards-compliant implementations, to provide an ongoing bridge for non-Windows software to be converted to Microsoft .NET.
An open source implementation of the .NET architecture is in progress. It is targeted at UNIX/Linux variants. It has been dubbed Mono, and development is sponsored by Ximian. There is also another Linux implementation of .NET that is part of the dotGNU project known as Portable.NET.
It has been speculated that .NET is Microsoft's strategic response to Linux. The reasoning is that by creating a new higher-level cross-platform software platform, Microsoft can move its core platform higher up the software stack, enabling it to replace the old Win32 platform running on the Windows kernel with a new system which can run on Windows, Linux or any other operating system.
External links
- "Microsoft .Net" Ars Technica article
- Ximian's Mono Project, an Open source implementation of the .NET Development Framework
- Guidelines to referencing the Microsoft� .NET brand
In Internet nomenclature, .net is a Top-level domain, or TLD, as is .com.