431

I've installed Visual Studio 15 Preview 3 and tried to use the new tuple feature

static void Main(string[] args)
{
    var x = DoSomething();
    Console.WriteLine(x.x);
}

static (int x, int y) DoSomething()
{
    return (1, 2);
}

When I compile I get the error:

Predefined type 'System.ValueTuple´2´ is not defined or imported

According to the blog post, this features should be "on" by default.

What did I do wrong?

3
  • 3
    Does anyone know if the NuGet package is required even in 2017 RTM targeting 4.6.2? It seems like you still need it and I expected that you wouldn't in the final version.
    – dmeglio
    Mar 7, 2017 at 17:49
  • you can try to use System.Tuple<int, int> instead
    – Kevin Xiao
    Mar 12, 2018 at 18:52
  • For me this stackoverflow.com/a/46533630/4383425 was the solution.
    – Andre
    Apr 27, 2018 at 10:33

10 Answers 10

572

For .NET 4.6.2 or lower, .NET Core 1.x, and .NET Standard 1.x you need to install the NuGet package System.ValueTuple:

Install-Package "System.ValueTuple"

Or using a package reference in VS 2017:

<PackageReference Include="System.ValueTuple" Version="4.4.0" />

.NET Framework 4.7, .NET Core 2.0, and .NET Standard 2.0 include these types.

9
  • 3
    Thanks. Does it mean it would work with 4.6.2 ? The Debugger still show's x.Item1 x.Item2. Instead of (x.x and x.y) Do you know if that will change?
    – gsharp
    Jul 15, 2016 at 5:35
  • 2
    Install-Package "System.ValueTuple" -IncludePrerelease Oct 1, 2016 at 2:02
  • 15
    Well, it doesn’t seem to be in 4.6.2.
    – binki
    Nov 5, 2016 at 14:42
  • 13
    Works with 4.6.2, still need this package though.
    – Eli
    Nov 17, 2016 at 17:02
  • 10
    With .NET 4.7, the package is natively included.
    – Mafii
    May 12, 2017 at 14:51
47

It's part of the .NET Framework 4.7.

As long as you don't target the above framework or higher (or .NET Core 2.0 / .NET Standard 2.0), you'll need to reference ValueTuple. Do this by adding the System.ValueTuple NuGet Package

4
  • 1
    I just tried with .net 4.7 and it didn't work? System.ValueTuple`2 not found
    – nicolas
    May 4, 2017 at 13:56
  • I've installed the .net Framework 4.7 and the target pack for Visual Studio. I also selected the version 4.7 in the drop down, but it still doesn't compile.
    – nicolas
    May 4, 2017 at 18:24
  • 13
    Ok I just found the problem: the dll System.ValueTuple was hardcoded in my project file (csproj). Removing this entry from the project file fixed the problem.
    – nicolas
    May 4, 2017 at 19:03
  • 1
    Good solution, but you might add more details. In my case, System.ValueTuple.dll was still hanging out in my bin folder. Once I deleted that, I was good to go. My language version is at default and all is working.
    – toddmo
    May 8, 2017 at 23:31
14

The ValueTuple types are built into newer frameworks:

  • .NET Framework 4.7
  • .NET Core 2.0
  • Mono 5.0
  • .Net Standard 2.0

Until you target one of those newer framework versions, you need to reference the ValueTuple package.

More details at http://blog.monstuff.com/archives/2017/03/valuetuple-availability.html

5

For Visual Studio Code use the built in Terminal and run:

dotnet add package "System.ValueTuple"

Don't forget to run dotnet restore afterwards.

2
  • I have not been able to get this to work in VS Code. Apr 5, 2017 at 19:08
  • 11
    Note: Don't do this with .Net 4.7
    – toddmo
    May 8, 2017 at 23:43
4

I also came accross this issue as I upgraded from .NET 4.6.2 to .NET 4.7.2. Unfortunately, I was not able to remove the package reference to System.ValueTuple because another NuGet package I use depends on it.

Finally I was able to locate the root cause: There was a .NET 4.6.2 version of mscorlib.dll lying around in the project folder (output of a publish operation) and MSBuild decided to reference this assembly instead of the official .NET 4.7.2 reference assembly located in C:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework\.NETFramework\v4.7.2.

Due to the fact that System.ValueTuple was introduced in .NET 4.7, MSBuild failed the compilation because it could not find the type in the reference assembly of .NET 4.6.2.

(duplicate of https://stackoverflow.com/a/57777123/128709)

3

Make sure you have .NET 4.6.2 Developer Pack for VS installed and then pull in System.ValueTuple package from NuGet.

2
  • 2
    Even with .NET 4.6.2 it seems to still need the System.ValueTuple package. Mar 10, 2017 at 20:34
  • 3
    @mrsundquist, yes anything below 4.7
    – toddmo
    May 8, 2017 at 23:44
3

In case others have the same problem, I ran into this error after updating a project to 4.7. Oddly enough, I had to remove the System.ValueTuple reference for this error to go away.

2

I would not advise adding ValueTuple as a package reference to the .net Framework projects. As you know this assembly is available from 4.7 .NET Framework.

There can be certain situations when your project will try to include at all costs ValueTuple from .NET Framework folder instead of package folder and it can cause some assembly not found errors.

We had this problem today in company. We had solution with 2 projects (I oversimplify that) :

  • Lib
  • Web

Lib was including ValueTuple and Web was using Lib. It turned out that by some unknown reason Web when trying to resolve path to ValueTuple was having HintPath into .NET Framework directory and was taking incorrect version. Our application was crashing because of that. ValueTuple was not defined in .csproj of Web nor HintPath for that assembly. The problem was very weird. Normally it would copy the assembly from package folder. This time was not normal.

For me it is always risk to add System.* package references. They are often like time-bomb. They are fine at start and they can explode in your face in the worst moment. My rule of thumb: Do not use System.* Nuget package for .NET Framework if there is no real need for them.

We resolved our problem by adding manually ValueTuple into .csproj file inside Web project.

0

I had to check System.ValueTuple.dll file was under source control and correct its reference in .cssproj files:

  1. rightclick each project in solution
  2. unload project
  3. edit .cssproj file: change

< Reference Include="System.ValueTuple" >

< HintPath >

....\ProjectName\ProjectName\obj\Release\Package\PackageTmp\bin\System.ValueTuple.dll

< /HintPath >

< /Reference >

into

< Reference Include="System.ValueTuple" >

< HintPath >

..\packages\System.ValueTuple.4.4.0\lib\netstandard1.0\System.ValueTuple.dll

< /HintPath >

< /Reference >

  1. save changes and reload projects
  2. find System.ValueTuple.dll and save it into this folder
  3. add reference of this file into source control

(Optional): 7. solve same problems with another .dll files this way

1
  • 1
    Hard coding a fixed file path (or any string) is never a good solution.
    – Arghya C
    Dec 12, 2018 at 7:26
0

We were seeing this same issue in one of our old projects that was targeting Framework 4.5.2. I tried several scenarios including all of the ones listed above: target 4.6.1, add System.ValueTuple package, delete bin, obj, and .vs folders. No dice. Repeat the same process for 4.7.2. Then tried removing the System.ValueTuple package since I was targeting 4.7.2 as one commenter suggested. Still nothing. Checked csproj file reference path. Looks right. Even dropped back down to 4.5.2 and installing the package again. All this with several VS restarts and deleting the same folders several times. Literally nothing worked.

I had to refactor to use a struct instead. I hope others don't continue to run into this issue in the future but thought this might be helpful if you end up as stumped up as we were.

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