Via Technet
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If you’re a software developer—or if you follow the work of software developers—you’ve probably heard of TouchDevelop,
a Microsoft Research app that enables you to write code for your phone
using scripts on your phone. Its ability to bring the excitement of
programming to Windows Phone 7 has reaped lots of enthusiasm from the
development community over the past year or so.
Now, the team behind TouchDevelop has taken things a step further, with a web app that can work on any Windows 8
device with a touchscreen. You can write Windows Store apps simply by
tapping on the screen of your device. The web app also works with a
keyboard and mouse, but the touchscreen capability means that the
keyboard is not required. To learn more, watch this video.
This reimplementation of TouchDevelop went live just in time for Build,
Microsoft’s annual conference that helps developers learn how to take
advantage of Windows 8. The conference is being held Oct. 30-Nov. 2 in
Redmond, Wash.
“Just as users could turn their scripts into Windows Phone apps,” says Nikolai Tillmann, principal research software-design engineer with the Research in Software Engineering (RiSE) team at Microsoft Research Redmond, “we will also allow our users to turn their scripts into Windows Store apps.”
The TouchDevelop web app, which requires Internet Explorer 10,
enables developers to publish their scripts so they can be shared with
others using TouchDevelop. As with the Windows Phone version, a
touchdevelop.com cloud service enables scripts to be published and
queried, and when you log in with the same credentials, all of your
scripts are synchronized between all your platforms and devices.
While
in the TouchDevelop web app, users can navigate to the properties of an
installed script already created. Videos describing editor operation of
the TouchDevelop web app are available on the project’s webpage.
TouchDevelop shipped as a Windows Phone app about a year and a half ago and has seen strong downloads and reviews in the Windows Phone Store.
“Our
TouchDevelop app for Windows Phone has been downloaded more than
200,000 times,” Tillmann says, “and more than 20,000 users have logged
in with a Windows Live ID or via Facebook.”
Since
the app became available, Tillmann and his RiSE colleagues have been
astounded by the creativity the user base has demonstrated. Further
Windows 8 developer excitement will be on display during Build, which is being streamed to audiences worldwide.