"The Mono Migration Analyzer (MoMA) tool helps you identify issues you may have when porting your .Net application to Mono. While Mono aims to be binary compatible with .Net, MoMA helps pinpoint platform specific calls (P/Invoke) and areas that are not yet supported by the Mono project."
MonoHelper offers XBuild integration into Visual Studio, so you can use Mono within Visual Studio (Build & Run). When using XBuild or XRebuild command, MonoHelper detects current installed Mono Runtime or use preconfigured installation path, call XBuild with current configuration settings and outputs the results into the Output Console. It also generates pdb symbol files, so you can debug XBuild compiled programs with Visual Studio (running with .NET Runtime - see Stackoverflow about how this is done). If you want to run your program with installed Mono runtime, this is also possible.
El artículo sirve como idea general, pero ya está muy obsoleto. Las Mono Tools ya no existen bajo ese nombre. El programador Mono en Windows tiene dos caminos posibles: 1) Instalar Xamarin Studio como IDE sustitutiva de Visual Studio. 2) Extender Visual Studio con Microsoft MonoHelper [https://visualstudiogallery.msdn.microsoft.com/cb83d210-b09f-4e21-949e-81ad23684c78]