News

Xamarin Support Added to Azure Mobile Services Offline

The upgrade is made possible by using SQLitePCL.

Back in April, Microsoft Azure added offline functionality for Azure Mobile Services on Windows Store and Windows Phone apps. It allows apps to continue to work when connectivity is lost, and is a key feature for developers. Now that feature has been added to iOS and Android apps created with Xamarin.

The Microsoft Open Technologies group, which specializes in open source collaboration, announced the update on its blog. Olivier Bloch wrote that data on those platforms is "stored locally and synchronized with the Cloud once the connection is reestablished." (Microsoft has provided a tutorial for how to deal with database update conflicts for offline data in Visual Studio.)

The offline capability is provided through the SQLitePCL open source project. It's a relational database portable class library (PCL) developed specifically for mobile platforms. As a PCL, it works with the same code across iOS, Android, Windows Store, Windows Phone and the .NET Framework.

The SQLitePCL is available on CodePlex as a NuGet package. SQLite itself is self-contained and server-less, requiring no configuration. Bloch added that "in the future," Azure Mobile Services Offline will support native Android and iOS development. When that future might come, he didn't say.

Microsoft Open Technologies is a wholly-owned Microsoft subsidiary that got its start in April 2012. It's created or contributed to dozens of open source devices and services projects across CodePlex and GitHub.

About the Author

Keith Ward is the editor in chief of Virtualization & Cloud Review. Follow him on Twitter @VirtReviewKeith.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Hands On: New VS Code Insiders Build Creates Web Page from Image in Seconds

    New Vision support with GitHub Copilot in the latest Visual Studio Code Insiders build takes a user-supplied mockup image and creates a web page from it in seconds, handling all the HTML and CSS.

  • Naive Bayes Regression Using C#

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the naive Bayes regression technique, where the goal is to predict a single numeric value. Compared to other machine learning regression techniques, naive Bayes regression is usually less accurate, but is simple, easy to implement and customize, works on both large and small datasets, is highly interpretable, and doesn't require tuning any hyperparameters.

  • VS Code Copilot Previews New GPT-4o AI Code Completion Model

    The 4o upgrade includes additional training on more than 275,000 high-quality public repositories in over 30 popular programming languages, said Microsoft-owned GitHub, which created the original "AI pair programmer" years ago.

  • Microsoft's Rust Embrace Continues with Azure SDK Beta

    "Rust's strong type system and ownership model help prevent common programming errors such as null pointer dereferencing and buffer overflows, leading to more secure and stable code."

  • Xcode IDE from Microsoft Archrival Apple Gets Copilot AI

    Just after expanding the reach of its Copilot AI coding assistant to the open-source Eclipse IDE, Microsoft showcased how it's going even further, providing details about a preview version for the Xcode IDE from archrival Apple.

Subscribe on YouTube

Upcoming Training Events