I'm trying to compile code from F# to use in Silverlight. I compile with:
--noframework --cliroot "C:\program Files\Microsoft Silverlight\2.0.31005.0" --standalone
This generates a standalone assembly that references the SL framework. But when I try to add a reference to the generated assembly, I get this error:
> You can only add project references to
> other Silverlight projects in the
> solution.
What is the VS plugin doing to determine that this isn't a Silverlight assembly? Here's the manifest:
// Metadata version: v2.0.50727
.assembly extern mscorlib
{
.publickeytoken = (7C EC 85 D7 BE A7 79 8E ) // |.....y.
.ver 2:0:5:0
}
.assembly FSSLLibrary1
{
// --- The following custom attribute is added automatically, do not uncomment -------
// .custom instance void [mscorlib]System.Diagnostics.DebuggableAttribute::.ctor(valuetype [mscorlib]System.Diagnostics.DebuggableAttribute/DebuggingModes) = ( 01 00 01 01 00 00 00 00 )
.hash algorithm 0x00008004
.ver 0:0:0:0
}
.module 'F#-Module-FSSLLibrary1'
// MVID: {49038883-5D18-7281-A745-038383880349}
.imagebase 0x00400000
.file alignment 0x00000200
.stackreserve 0x00100000
.subsystem 0x0003 // WINDOWS_CUI
.corflags 0x00000001 // ILONLY
// Image base: 0x04120000
I don't understand what it's finding that it doesn't like; it's pure verifiable IL. I compared to a SL "class library" assembly, and it looks the same. The only difference was some attributes, but I deleted those and VS still let me reference the DLL. I even added unverifiable IL to the "SL library" DLL and it still loaded.
Any suggestions?