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I have the need to make a call to the System.Xaml library in .NET 4.0. Is it possible to make a call to this library if your project is targeted to 3.5?

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4 Answers 4

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No. You'll need to target your project to run in .NET 4, and to use the CLR v4, in order to use .NET 4 assemblies.


On a different note - there is no real advantage here. Just change your application to target .NET 4. If you are going to add a dependency on the .NET 4 framework assemblies, you might as well just target .NET 4 in the first place...

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  • The problem is, at the moment i only have VS2008, and i need a particular feature of Xaml (Serialization) in .net 4.0. I was hoping to be able to load it with reflection or something.
    – mrwayne
    May 4, 2010 at 7:10
  • You can get hold of VS2010 very soon. Re-shuffle the projects' order. May 4, 2010 at 14:07
  • @mrwayne: You can always use VS 2010 Express (available now): microsoft.com/express May 4, 2010 at 18:18
  • Yeah, unfortunately its a bit more complicated than that, i'm in a work place that would need the entire development team to be upgraded, which means the software needs to be backwards compatibility tested moving to .net 4 ect ect.
    – mrwayne
    May 4, 2010 at 22:26
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    @mrwayne: If you're working in that type of environment, adding a dep. on .NET 4 is probably not a good idea, either. I'd wait until your company does a full migration to .NET 4. May 4, 2010 at 23:13
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Here's a kind of Rube Goldberg-esque solution which involves wrapping your .NET 4 DLL methods in COM, and then calling that COM wrapper from .NET 3.5:

https://www.codeproject.com/Articles/204406/How-To-Use-a-NET-Based-DLL-From-NET-Based-Appl

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No, you can't the assembly is mapped differently, one thing that you could do but that's a pain is to create a type in memory that reassembles your net 4.0 dll.

You could use CECIL to get IL instructions.

If you don't know IL very much don't even try to do it.

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This question is similar to "how can I use a .NET 2 assembly in .NET 1.x application". It is impossible to add the assembly for new CLR as a reference, but like Hamish pointed out, inter process communication may help.

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