/target (Visual Basic)
Specifies the format of compiler output.
/target:{exe | library | module | winexe}
Remarks
The following table summarizes the effect of the /target option.
Option | Behavior |
---|---|
/target:exe |
Causes the compiler to create an executable console application. This is the default option when no /target option is specified. The executable file is created with an .exe extension. Unless otherwise specified with the /out option, the output file name takes the name of the input file that contains the Sub Main procedure. Only one Sub Main procedure is required in the source-code files that are compiled into an .exe file. Use the /main compiler option to specify which class contains the Sub Main procedure. |
/target:library |
Causes the compiler to create a dynamic-link library (DLL). The dynamic-link library file is created with a .dll extension. Unless otherwise specified with the /out option, the output file name takes the name of the first input file. When building a DLL, a Sub Main procedure is not required. |
/target:module |
Causes the compiler to generate a module that can be added to an assembly. The output file is created with an extension of .netmodule. The .NET common language runtime cannot load a file that does not have an assembly. However, you can incorporate such a file into the assembly manifest of an assembly by using /reference. When code in one module references internal types in another module, both modules must be incorporated into an assembly manifest by using /reference. The /addmodule option imports metadata from a module. |
/target:winexe |
Causes the compiler to create an executable Windows program. The executable file is created with an .exe extension. A Windows program is one that provides a user interface from either the .NET Framework class library or with the Win32 APIs. Unless otherwise specified with the /out option, the output file name takes the name of the input file that contains the Sub Main procedure. Only one Sub Main procedure is required in the source-code files that are compiled into an .exe file. In cases where your code has more than one class with a Sub Main procedure, use the /main compiler option to specify which class contains the Sub Main procedure |
Unless you specify /target:module, /target causes a .NET Framework assembly manifest to be placed in an output file.
Each instance of Vbc.exe produces, at most, one output file. If you specify a compiler option such as /out or /target more than once, the last one the compiler processes is put into effect. Information about all files in a compilation is placed in the manifest. All output files except those created with /target:module contain assembly metadata in the manifest. Use MSIL Disassembler (Ildasm.exe) to view the metadata in an output file.
The short form of /target is /t.
To set /target in the Visual Studio integrated development environment
Have a project selected in Solution Explorer. On the Project menu, click Properties. For more information, see Introduction to the Project Designer.
Click the Application tab.
Modify the value in the Application Type box.
Note
The /target:module option is not available from within the Visual Studio development environment; it is available only when compiling from the command line.
Example
The following code compiles in.vb
, creating in.dll
:
vbc /target:library in.vb
See Also
Reference
/main
/out (Visual Basic)
/reference (Visual Basic)
/addmodule
Sample Compilation Command Lines