It depends. Keep in mind that Centennial is a bridge.
Centennial apps run on Windows 10 Anniversary edition (10.0; Build 14393) or later. On this Windows version the default installed .NET version is 4.6.2. Windows 10 Creators Update comes with .NET 4.7 by default.
So, if someone downloads your application on Windows 10 Anniversary edition and tries to run it, the following can happen:
- .NET 4.6.2 is installed, your application doesn't use anything from .NET 4.7.1: your application works properly
- .NET 4.6.2 is installed, your application is using .NET 4.7.1 specific features: your application doesn't work properly
- .NET 4.7.1 is installed, your application doesn't use anything form .NET 4.7.1: your application works properly
- .NET 4.7.1 is installed, your application is using .NET 4.7.1 specific features: your application works properly
You can apply the same logic for the later versions of Windows 10.
Another interesting option would be to package .NET 4.7.1 along with your application. If I understand it correctly, the Centennial apps have a virtual file system, which is basically merged with the real one. So, you should be able to install .NET 4.7.1 with your application and then package it together with your application. Then it will work on Windows 10 Anniversary edition as well on the later editions.