Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyModel 8.0.1
Provides abstractions for reading `.deps` files. When a .NET application is compiled, the SDK generates a JSON manifest file (`<ApplicationName>.deps.json`) that contains information about application dependencies. You can use `Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyModel` to read information from this manifest at run time. This is useful when you want to dynamically compile code (for example, using Roslyn Emit API) referencing the same dependencies as your main application.
By default, the dependency manifest contains information about the application's target framework and runtime dependencies. Set the PreserveCompilationContext project property to `true` to additionally include information about reference assemblies used during compilation.
Showing the top 20 packages that depend on Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyModel.
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SpecFlow
SpecFlow aims at bridging the communication gap between domain experts and developers by binding business readable behavior specifications to the underlying implementation. Our mission is to provide a pragmatic and frictionless approach to Acceptance Test Driven Development and Behavior Driven Development for .NET projects today.
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Scrutor
Register services using assembly scanning and a fluent API.
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.NET Framework 4.6.2
- System.Text.Encodings.Web (>= 8.0.0)
- System.Text.Json (>= 8.0.4)
- System.Buffers (>= 4.5.1)
- System.Memory (>= 4.5.5)
.NET 6.0
- System.Text.Encodings.Web (>= 8.0.0)
- System.Text.Json (>= 8.0.4)
.NET 7.0
- System.Text.Encodings.Web (>= 8.0.0)
- System.Text.Json (>= 8.0.4)
.NET 8.0
- System.Text.Encodings.Web (>= 8.0.0)
- System.Text.Json (>= 8.0.4)
.NET Standard 2.0
- System.Text.Encodings.Web (>= 8.0.0)
- System.Text.Json (>= 8.0.4)
- System.Buffers (>= 4.5.1)
- System.Memory (>= 4.5.5)