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NET
Frameworks
.NET Framework
2.0
.NET Framework
3.0
.NET Framework
3.5
Microsoft .NET Framework
2.0
Microsoft .NET Framework
2.0
The first two .Net frameworks (1.1 & 2.0) focused on allowing many
different languages to communicate with a common set of libraries
translated through the Common Language Runtime (CLR). Introduced
with .NET 1.1 and enhanced with .NET 2.0, the CLR works on a
relatively simple concept: A common runtime model executes code
for any system running the .NET Framework. What this means to you
as a developer is that you don’t need to keep relearning languages
for different technologies. For instance, a C# developer who writes
Windows Forms applications take the knowledge used for building
forms and apply it to writing web pages. Similarly, a Visual Basic .NET
developer can switch from writing mobile applications to writing web
services. The CLR acts as an arbitrator and communicates back and
forth.