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Ian Kemp
  • 29.8k
  • 12
  • 116
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Our organisation, with many legacy .NET Framework projects which we're migrating to .NET 6, suffers from this same dilemma, and we haven't yet found a good way to unambiguously communicate which particular "dialect" of .NET is being discussed either. What I've somewhat settled on is:

  • ".NET" as an umbrella term for the entire .NET ecosystem - Framework, Core, Standard, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions
  • ".NET (Core)" when referring to .NET Core, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions - the parentheses around "Core" appear to be the magic bullet that satisfies the it's-.NET-not-.NET-Core pedants
  • ".NET Standard" when referring to the now-deprecated standard
  • ".NET Framework" when referring to the Framework exclusively

Our organisation, with many legacy .NET Framework projects which we're migrating to .NET 6, suffers from this same dilemma, and we haven't yet found a good way to unambiguously communicate which particular "dialect" of .NET is being discussed either. What I've somewhat settled on is:

  • ".NET" as an umbrella term for the entire .NET ecosystem - Framework, Core, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions
  • ".NET (Core)" when referring to .NET Core, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions - the parentheses around "Core" appear to be the magic bullet that satisfies the it's-.NET-not-.NET-Core pedants
  • ".NET Framework" when referring to the Framework exclusively

Our organisation, with many legacy .NET Framework projects which we're migrating to .NET 6, suffers from this same dilemma, and we haven't yet found a good way to unambiguously communicate which particular "dialect" of .NET is being discussed either. What I've somewhat settled on is:

  • ".NET" as an umbrella term for the entire .NET ecosystem - Framework, Core, Standard, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions
  • ".NET (Core)" when referring to .NET Core, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions - the parentheses around "Core" appear to be the magic bullet that satisfies the it's-.NET-not-.NET-Core pedants
  • ".NET Standard" when referring to the now-deprecated standard
  • ".NET Framework" when referring to the Framework exclusively
Source Link
Ian Kemp
  • 29.8k
  • 12
  • 116
  • 167

Our organisation, with many legacy .NET Framework projects which we're migrating to .NET 6, suffers from this same dilemma, and we haven't yet found a good way to unambiguously communicate which particular "dialect" of .NET is being discussed either. What I've somewhat settled on is:

  • ".NET" as an umbrella term for the entire .NET ecosystem - Framework, Core, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions
  • ".NET (Core)" when referring to .NET Core, and "new" .NET 5/6/future versions - the parentheses around "Core" appear to be the magic bullet that satisfies the it's-.NET-not-.NET-Core pedants
  • ".NET Framework" when referring to the Framework exclusively