Published by: DevTools Insights Reading Time: 7 minutes
If you have the choice, target .NET Framework 4.7.2 or 4.8. They are much easier to install. But if you are stuck in 4.0, save this blog post, bookmark the SDK download, and know that you are not alone.
If you have ever opened an old legacy solution in Visual Studio 2022, tried to install a NuGet package for a client who refuses to leave Windows 7, or attempted to maintain a CI/CD pipeline for a dinosaur system, you have likely encountered the silent hero of backwards compatibility: . net framework 4.0 targeting pack
Your manager says, "Just change the Target Framework dropdown to 4.0."
However, pragmatism wins in enterprise software. If you have a 100,000-line WinForms app that uses WebClient (not HttpClient ) and third-party DLLs from a defunct vendor, Published by: DevTools Insights Reading Time: 7 minutes
dir "C:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework\.NETFramework\" If you see v4.0 , you are good. If not, reinstall the SDK. Modern NuGet (v6+) sometimes refuses to restore packages for net40 . You need to add this to your nuget.config :
But what exactly is it? Why does it still matter in 2024? And how do you install it when Microsoft’s official links seem to lead to 404 errors? If you have ever opened an old legacy
You open Visual Studio 2022. You look.