views:

243

answers:

4

I've found a lot of pages about CLS compliance.

I've understood that CLS compliance:

Many peolple write that "if you write code, you should write it CLS compliant." But as far I can read, there is no reason to use CLS compliance in generic software.

Am I right, or did I miss something?

+3  A: 

There may not be a specific reason to have your code be CLS compliant, but people are referring to it being a "best practice"--something that you should do because it's a good habit, rather than being measurably better for a particular scenario.

In other words, it's a good idea to make your code CLS compliant unless you have a reason not to.

Adam Robinson
+7  A: 

If you write a library or framework it makes sense to ensure your library can be used from any CLR language.

Remus Rusanu
CIL (Common Intermediate Language) is not sufficient?
Luca
afaik no, because CIL may contain features that are unusable from certain CLR languages. Eg. you have a method that takes UInt32 parameter, the CIL code is fine but the method cannot be invoked from a language that has no concept of unsigned.
Remus Rusanu
What happens is the language is "translated" in CIL (having the source code, of course)? In this scenario, it seems CLS compliance is required only with legacy assemblies, right?
Luca
No, it is required if the DLL is to be used from any langauge that only supports the CLS SUBSET of the CLR functionality.
TomTom
+2  A: 

The answer is to allow maximum compatibility across .NET languages. CLS is the lingua franca that allows C# assemblies to work with F#, Iron Python, C++/CLI, VB.NET, Boo and all the other .NET languages. Step outside that boundary and your assembly may work correctly, but not necessarily.

plinth
+5  A: 

CLS-compliance is particularly important if you're distributing libraries - specifically, writing CLS compliant guarantees that your libraries will be usable by all CLS-compliant languages.

For instance, Visual Basic is not case-sensitive, whereas C# is. One of the requirements of CLS compliance is that public (and protected) member names should not differ only by case, thus ensuring that your libraries can be used safely by VB code, or any other .Net language that doesn't differentiate based on case.

Dathan