112

After format my computer I reinstalled Vs 2017 V 15.6.3 and install ASP.Net Core SDK from Microsoft 2.1.4

But when I create new asp core application VS failed with error

"Project file is incomplete. Expected imports are missing"

Please, can anyone help?

Error after while creating ASP core application

9

32 Answers 32

72

I had the same issue. In my case, deleting global.json and appsettings solved the problem.

8
  • 10
    This worked for me although to clarify I just had to delete (/rename) "global.json". Fwiw: It contained: { "sdk": { "version": "2.0.0" } }
    – ubienewbie
    Apr 2, 2018 at 17:06
  • 2
    In my case, I had missing .NetCore version 2.0.0 installation on my machine and it was mentioned in global.json. So I just installed it and it worked fine. Jun 4, 2018 at 6:17
  • 3
    dotnet --version shows 2.1.201, while global.json mentioned a slightly lower version, 2.1.101. Apparently the version has to match exactly for it to work, no downwards compatibility. Or just remove the file as suggested in this answer.
    – GolezTrol
    Jun 5, 2018 at 10:17
  • 7
    deleting only global.json was enough for me. The appsettings can stay on place Aug 31, 2018 at 6:34
  • 13
    It would be nice to tell the folder(s) of global.json and appsettings in this answer.
    – fernacolo
    Mar 16, 2019 at 23:38
43

Another potential cause is you installed a .NET Core version which is incompatible with Visual Studio. This might be unrelated to the original question by the OP, since it concerns different version numbers, but since I landed on this page while looking for help I thought this might be useful to others.

At the time of writing, I installed .NET Core 2.2.203 which is not compatible with Visual Studio 2017 (Professional 15.9.11).

The .NET Core download page lists a separate download for Visual Studio 2017. Be sure to download this one when you intend to use Visual Studio 2017. The current supported version is .NET Core 2.2.106.

3
  • Oddly, in my app I have an N-Tier app (UI, BLL and DAL). The BLL project loaded fine wtih this version of .NET Core. +1
    – Dave
    May 9, 2019 at 6:57
  • Thank you very much! This works! SDK 2.2.105 only works with Visual Studio 15.9.8 or lower.
    – hubert17
    May 21, 2019 at 5:06
  • upgrading the VS 2017 Community to version 15.9.12 solved the issue in my case
    – GoldenAge
    May 29, 2019 at 14:02
26

You can check global.json file which you can find in solution root directory and make sure that the target SDK version in it installed on your machine or update it to one you already have it installed for example if you have SDK version 2.1.4 installed your global.json should look like this

{
  "sdk":
  {
    "version": "2.1.400"
  }
}   
7
  • 1
    This was it for me. Version "2.1.300" in global.json, but 2.1.200 & 2.1.403 installed; changing to 2.1.400 worked. Oct 29, 2018 at 8:33
  • 3
    Worked both changing it to one of installed versions of SDK or removing version attribute completely
    – Salaros
    Nov 16, 2018 at 8:38
  • 2
    Worked for me as well. Changed the version to match the closest to what I already had on my system. You can run "dotnet --versions" to see what you have installed.
    – daudihus
    Dec 12, 2018 at 3:02
  • 3
    dotnet --list-sdks and dotnet --list-runtimes to see all you have installed dotnet --version will show the current version in use. Dec 18, 2018 at 8:13
  • 1
    This was the solution for us as well. In our case, we had some projects on VS2017 with netcore 2.1; we installed netcore 3, and we could not open the projects any more. Creating global.json in the project's root folder solved the issue
    – Jack Casas
    Aug 18, 2020 at 15:02
20

Resolved

  1. Even after uninstalling certain version from control panel, there would the files and folders with deleted version found in C:\Program Files\dotnet\sdk

  2. Please go and delete unwanted version folder

  3. Try reloading the project

This worked for me

0
19

Repairing last Core installation worked for me

3
  • 1
    I had to reboot as well but this fixed it for me.
    – DTown
    Jun 11, 2018 at 12:49
  • 2
    For people looking "how" to repair the .NET Framework (works for Core too), search for ".NET Framework Repair Tool" in your favorite search engine. Running just the first step fixed it for me.
    – KSwift87
    Jun 13, 2018 at 18:00
  • 2
    also W10 Contol Panel - Programs- Programs and Features select installation and repair
    – Uzay
    Jun 14, 2018 at 12:07
17

In my case, I had two versions of Visual Studio installed (15.7 and 15.6). 15.7 didn't have the web workloads installed, though .net core 2.1 RC1 was already installed. I installed the asp.net workload into VS2017, and then repaired my .net core install for good measure. Definitely something in this process swapped my c:\program files(x86)\dotnet and c"\program files\dotnet in this path and Visual Studio (15.7) wouldn't open my web project.

I simply edited the System Environment variables, moved the x86 folder down one and voila - reopened Visual Studio and it now loaded my project. System environment variables

3
  • 3
    In my case, c:\Program Files\dotnet\ got removed from my PATHs
    – micahtan
    Aug 16, 2018 at 14:51
  • 2
    ahhhhhh so much time wasted on this, this was the answer for me. THANK YOU!
    – spalt
    Jan 12, 2019 at 1:56
  • Installed NET4.7.1, then all existing Net.Core projects became ruined. The "Move down" magic fixed them back. Feb 12, 2019 at 12:49
17

I solved this problem by modifying the first line in the .csproj file from:

<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk.WindowsDesktop">

to:

<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
1
  • 1
    You've saved my day, this worked for me as well!!!
    – Kurubaran
    Jan 3, 2022 at 4:30
15

Eh, rookie mistake, I had Visual Studio SSDT open and was trying to open an existing .Net Core project which produces the same error:

"Project file is incomplete. Expected imports are missing"

The solution was to use Visual Studio not SSDT, see in Help > About:

enter image description here

1
  • 1
    After hours of confusion over .net core versioning, this was the actual solution for me. And for me SSDT had become the default when opening a solution file from a folder, so I fixed that too. Thanks!
    – Alex
    Aug 7, 2019 at 14:34
10

I have solved this problem a couple of times lately by closing Visual Studio and running the following commands

  1. dotnet nuget locals -c all
  2. dotnet clean
  3. dotnet build

There seems to be times, especially at the beginning of projects, when nuget gets out of whack (technical term).

0
10

After installing VS2019 I started to have the same error when opening existing .Net Core solutions in VS2017.
In Visual Studio Installer I've updated VS2017 to the latest version (15.9.11) and the problem disappeared.

Later after upgrading VS2019 to the latest release I started to have the same errors and had to upgrade VS2017 again.

0
5

I started to get this error when unistalled all my old .NET Core SDKs and installed the latest one, 2.1.5 at the time of posting. I have tried all the solutions here without any luck so decided to check what is the current SDK version after all the cleaup I did because I thought this is causing the problem, and I was right - started a command prompt and wrote dotnet --version and got the message "Did you mean to run dotnet SDK commands? Please install dotnet SDK from:". Strange, the SDK is installed but the system doesn't see it. Then I looked in my environment variables and the PATH variable had the x86 for dotnet path before the regular Program Files (the x64 one) path. So I moved the x64 before the x86 and voila, everthing is back to normal.

Hope I helped someone.

3
  • You helped me. This just happened when I upgraded from 2.2.3 to 2.2.4. I wonder if there's a specific order of install new/uninstall old that causes it to happen.
    – MattOG
    Apr 11, 2019 at 14:59
  • @MattOG, I have tried numerous variants for installing/uninstalling but this problem occurs every time. I guess will just have to get used to that ;) It's not a biggy after all when we have a source like stackoverflow.
    – Ivaylo
    Apr 11, 2019 at 16:07
  • Is it the same as Smart Dev's answer Project file is incomplete. Expected imports are missing ? Apr 29, 2019 at 4:49
4

I got the same issue. I could not create new ASP .Net Core 2 on fresh installed VS2017 or open existing one, which works perfectly on another computer with VS2017.

It's started work for me after uninstalling all .NET Core Runtimes and .NET Core Windows Server Hosting from Windows. SDKs have been left only and all works finally. enter image description here

Probably, I needed to uninstall just .NET Core Runtimes or .NET Core Windows Server Hosting from Windows and it would be enough.

2
  • I never had ASP Core 2 SDK installed on my machine, issue still present even after fresh installation
    – alelom
    May 10, 2018 at 14:54
  • Worked for me. After uninstalling Core Windows Server Hosting. no restart of VS. I just reloaded the projects. Nov 21, 2018 at 8:18
4

The only thing that worked for me was to upgrade Visual studio:

enter image description here

enter image description here

3

I had the same symptoms from a corrupted dotnet core SDK (from the command line I was unable to run dotnet -v, where previously I was able). My project failed to load after a failed IIS web platform installation failure. Reinstalling .NET core SDK resolved the issue.

3

I had the same issue. took me quiet a while to figure it out. In my case, I was trying to open a new ASP .NET Core Application and I was getting back 0 Projects like the one on this post.

What I tried: I tried changing environmental variables under Control Panel\System and Security\System (click advance settings)

enter image description here

Then click Environmental Variables

enter image description here

Then check to see if you have dotnet path included, whether it is under Program Files or Program files (x86) enter image description here

Some people suggested to move (x86) up, which is based on microsoft documentation

What fixed my issue: Turns out I had the wrong version installed and it was not compatible with Visual Studio 2017 enter image description here

Then I removed the other installations and reinstalled the right version that is compatible with VS17 and works like a magic. Hope it helps someone in the future.

2
  • 2
    This was a portion of what worked for me. All other SDKs on my machine were 64bit (and thus in "Program Files".) I had to install the latest Core for VS 2017 - 2.2.110 as the x86 version. This goes into the "Program Files (x86)" tree. I removed the previously added PATH statements to the normal "Program Files" folder and replaced them with the "Program Files (x86)" and it works again!
    – Grandizer
    Jan 17, 2020 at 13:47
  • This helped me! I uninstalled a bunch of sdk's that Windows 10 Insider Preview auto installed for me and accidentally removed the one VS 2017 needed. Thanks!
    – Jeff LaFay
    Mar 26, 2020 at 14:57
2

in my case, I went to the folder C:\Program Files\dotnet\sdk delete the preview sdk folder, then on the command line run:

dotnet sdk 2.1.200

to set the correct sdk version for asp.net core. this fixed the problem.

0
2

I had the same error message. In my case. I had to install the .NET Core cross-platform development toolset.

Steps:

  1. In Visual Studio, go to Tools > Get Tools and Features...
  2. Modify the installation under Workloads: select .NET Core cross-platform development and click Modify.
  3. Restart VS and rebuild your project.
1

Thanks guys, i had reinstall older version of visual studio 2017 and it works well. My VS version is 15.4 and it's fine

2
  • 7
    Version 15.6.7 here, and the issue is still present. I wouldn't mark this as an accepted answer as it isn't really a solution for the latest VS versions.
    – alelom
    May 10, 2018 at 14:52
  • learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/… required VS2017 is 15.9.0
    – Griffin
    Apr 12, 2019 at 17:06
1

This happened to me when I uninstalled a VS2015 instance of Visual Studio I had running side by side with VS2017.

I had to go out and reinstall the .Net Core sdk/runtime with the x86 version. I had already manually done the x64 versions of these but didn't think about visual studio running in 32bit.

These are the files:

  • dotnet-sdk-x.x.x-win-x86.exe

  • DotNetCore.x.x.x-WindowsHosting.exe

1

Delete all build generated bin and obj folders. This worked for me after renaming project and trying to reload solution. Not really sure about the real cause of incompatible loading.

1

I was facing the same issue. I was running my project on .Net core 2.2. I tried every single solution given here but nothing worked. I repaired my visual studio and it's working fine now.

0
1

I have resolved it by updating visual studio to 2017 version.

The actual problem was that .net core version was later than Visual Studio.

Go to Help> Check for update, update Visual Studio.

0

I had the same problem with an ASP.net Core 2.0 project after I've installed the DotNetCore.2.0.5-WindowsHosting Framework on my development machine. I could solve this problem after I've deinstalled the WindowsHosting Framework and all .net Core packages. After this I've reinstalled the dotnet-sdk-2.1.200-win-x64 package and everything worked fine.

0

Deleting the bin and obj folders for the project fixed this for me.

0

Same issue...took me a while to figure out. Since I was working on an ASP.NET Core project that targeted .NET Core 1.1, I thought I still needed the .NET Core 1.1 SDK installed. Since I had .NET Core SDK 2.1 installed too there was some sort of conflict and I couldn't open the project file. After uninstalling .NET Core 1.1 I was then able to open my project.

0

Run dotnet restore on command line for the solution.

Tip. If you've uninstalled the latest .net core version let's say 2.1.403 and installed the previous one, ensure the 2.1.403 folder has been actually removed at the path

C:\Program Files\dotnet\sdk\

I had the issue due to there left an empty folder with 2.1.403

0

I get the same issue, and I run Visual with Administrator privilege again. This helps me to open project nomarlly.

0

Turns out my project was dependent on another project in the solution, which had failed NuGet dependency issues, which in turn was because the Target Framework in the project properties was blank.

I opened the .csproj file to check the target framework, downloaded the target framework and chose "repair", then restarted Visual Studio and all good again!

0

I just had the same issue while installing the new preview version of VS 2019. I fixed it by uninstalling the latest update which in turn uninstalled the most recent downloaded version of core. Which I belive caused the missmatch.

0

Just need to cross check your project creation .net core library version with updated one.When you update core library it won't get updated into .csproj, either you need to update it manually or need to remove latest/updated core sdk file.

To check .net core version --fire command on cmd :- dotnet --version

Then check with installed library in Program and Features --Removing of latest library resolve the problem without change of single line

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