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extern alias (C# Reference)

You might have to reference two versions of assemblies that have the same fully-qualified type names. For example, you might have to use two or more versions of an assembly in the same application. By using an external assembly alias, the namespaces from each assembly can be wrapped inside root-level namespaces named by the alias, which enables them to be used in the same file.

Note

The extern keyword is also used as a method modifier, declaring a method written in unmanaged code.

To reference two assemblies with the same fully-qualified type names, an alias must be specified at a command prompt, as follows:

/r:GridV1=grid.dll

/r:GridV2=grid20.dll

This creates the external aliases GridV1 and GridV2. To use these aliases from within a program, reference them by using the extern keyword. For example:

extern alias GridV1;

extern alias GridV2;

Each extern alias declaration introduces an additional root-level namespace that parallels (but does not lie within) the global namespace. Thus types from each assembly can be referred to without ambiguity by using their fully qualified name, rooted in the appropriate namespace-alias.

In the previous example, GridV1::Grid would be the grid control from grid.dll, and GridV2::Grid would be the grid control from grid20.dll.

Using Visual Studio

If you are using Visual Studio, aliases can be provided in similar way.

Add reference of grid.dll and grid20.dll to your project in Visual Studio. Open a property tab and change the Aliases from global to GridV1 and GridV2 respectively.

Use these aliases the same way above

 extern alias GridV1;  
  
 extern alias GridV2;  

Now you can create alias for a namespace or a type by using alias directive. For more information, see using directive.

using Class1V1 = GridV1::Namespace.Class1;

using Class1V2 = GridV2::Namespace.Class1;

C# Language Specification

For more information, see the C# Language Specification. The language specification is the definitive source for C# syntax and usage.

See also