The Five Most Viewed JNBridge Blog Posts of 2017
…in the topic. You can download slides for the talk here. Serializing and Deserializing Java Objects from a .NET Program. This is a fairly technical post covering a common interoperability…
…in the topic. You can download slides for the talk here. Serializing and Deserializing Java Objects from a .NET Program. This is a fairly technical post covering a common interoperability…
…not converting C# engine to Java Get Started To solve the complex problem of Java and .NET interoperability in your organization, download a free trial copy of JNBridgePro from jnbridge.com….
…and by the community. There are several available images with the Play Framework already installed. Let’s choose one and download it to the Docker server. Enter the following command line…
…access a copy of the agreement applicable to each JNBridge Product by clicking on the appropriate link below: Software License Agreement Product Version(s) Links JNBridgePro 6.0 and above pdf html…
…www.jnbridge.com About JNBridge JNBridgePro connects Java and .NET Framework-based components and applications together with simple-to-use Visual Studio and Eclipse plug-ins that remove the complexities of cross-platform interoperability. JNBridge’s interoperability software…
…can download them from Oracle’s Java site. The downloaded updaters will only update the specific Java versions, and they won’t pull the rug out from under you by removing completely…
…to construct a .NET Core console application that calls Java classes. This example uses .NET code to call log4j, a Java-based logging package. Description (PDF) Call .NET Core from Java…
…Modules also specify what other modules they require, which allows for compile-time and run-time checks to determine whether all the required components are present. Finally, modules are a much more…
…the Windows 8 Start Screen? Do you think it will help you do your work, or will it get in the way. Leave a comment, or contact us at info@jnbridge.com….
…on Linux with Mono. All JNBridge labs are distributed freely, with full documentation and source code. They are announced on the company’s blog (http://www.jnbridge.com/jn/blog/) and are available on JNBridge’s website…