![]() ![]() DotNet 2 *REPLACED* a ton of functionality from 1.0/1.1 (anyone who dealt w/ 1.1 remembers the pains). So you ask why 3.0 and 3.5 used the 2.0 CLR? because it wasn't changing anything, it was building. ![]() This solves the DLL Hell problem which used to exist, in which case they would all be forced to use the same version, which inevitably would include incompatibilities. This allows program A to use v1, program B to use v2, and program C to use v3. The multiple versions allows me to publish 3 versions of the same assembly concurrently. If you actually look into the file system behind the GAC (which requires either a command prompt to understand the folder structure, or drive mappings), Microsoft has always had a folder structure as: I'm not reading much difference in GAC behavior. ![]()
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