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Does SQL Server 2008 ship with the .NET 3.5 CLR, so that stored procedures written in CLR can use 3.5 features?

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Actually it ships with .NET 3.5 SP1. So yes, the stored procs can use 3.5 features and libraries.

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I swear this isn't being pedantic, but is an important distinction -- I don't know what specifically you need when you say ".NET 3.5 CLR" -- probably the .NET 3.5 Framework? Possibly C# 3.0 language features? But the CLR that .NET 3.5 runs on is still CLR 2.0. (the link is to the same explanation re: .NET 3.0; I couldn't immediately find this info on 3.5. Actually, the best explanation of CLR vs. Framework vs. language version numbers I've yet found is on page 12 of Teach Yourself WPF in 24 Hours*)

So, my point is that you can even use the features of .NET 3.5 and C# 3.0 on SQL 2005 CLR stored procedures -- we do, at my company -- and there's not even really any trickery to it. All you have to do is have the free 3.5 framework on your server. Obviously the SQL 2005 answer isn't that relevant for your specific question, but hopefully this will be helpful to the person who eventually comes across this page via Google.

*disclosure: I'm friends with the authors

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  • Not pedantic at all. It is nice to see someone mentioning the distinction as it helps to clarify when Microsoft says that SQL Server 2005 / 2008 / 2008 R2 are bound to the 2.0 version of CLR yet able to use features from Framework versions 3.0 and 3.5. And same with SQL Server 2012 / 2014 bound to version 4.0 of the CLR yet able to use functionality from Framework versions 4.5, 4.5.1, etc. Dec 11, 2014 at 23:09

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