TheStandard Libraries are a set of libraries included in theCommon Language Infrastructure (CLI) in order to encapsulate many common functions, such as file reading and writing,XML document manipulation,exception handling, applicationglobalization, network communication,threading, andreflection, which makes the programmer's job easier. It is much larger in scope than standard libraries for most other languages, includingC++, and is comparable in scope and coverage to thestandard libraries of Java.
The Standard Libraries are the Base Class Library (BCL), Runtime Infrastructure Library (both part of the kernel profile), Network Library, Reflection Library, XML Library (which with the first two listed libraries form the compact profile), Extended Array Library, Parallel Library, Floating Point Library and Vararg Library.
TheFramework Class Library (FCL) is the original implementation of the Standard Libraries as the .NET Framework, which includes it, is the first implementation of the CLI.
The main standard libraries are organized into two Standard Profiles, the Kernel Profile, and the Compact Profile.[1] The following standard libraries do not belong to any profile: the Extended Array Library, the Extended Numerics Library, the Parallel Library and the Vararg Library.[2][3][4][5]
The Kernel Profile is a subset of the Compact Profile. The Kernel Profile contains the Base Class Library (BCL) and Runtime Infrastructure Library.[6]
The Compact Profile contains those libraries in the Kernel Profile as well as the Network Library, the Reflection Library and the XML Library.[7]
The Base Class Library is a simple runtime library for modern programming languages. It serves as the Standard for the runtime library for the language C# as well as one of the CLI Standard Libraries. It provides types to represent the built-in data types of the CLI, simple file access, custom attributes, security attributes, string manipulation, formatting, streams, collections, among other things.[8] It defines types in the following namespaces:
Name | Description |
---|---|
System | Defines theObject class which allreference type objects derive from (including value-type objects) and theValueType class which allvalue type objects derive from. It also defines the base data types likeintegers,floating point numbers,character,strings,Boolean,enumeration and more. Support for the environment and platform and acommand-line interface is provided along with base classes forexceptions andattributes. It definesarrays anddelegates, mathematical functions and many other types. |
System.Collections | Defines many commoncontainer types used in programming, such asdictionaries,hashtables,lists,queues andstacks. |
System.Collections.Generic | Definesgeneric types of the container types in theSystem.Collections namespace. |
System.Diagnostics | Defines types that provide the ability to diagnose applications. It includesevent logging, performance counters,tracing and interaction with system processes. |
System.Globalization | Defines types that define culture-related information, including language, country/region, calendars in use, format patterns for dates, currency and numbers and sort order for strings. |
System.IO | Defines type that enable reading from and writing to differentstreams, such as files or otherdata streams. Also provides a connection to thefile system. |
System.Security | Defines types that represent the security system and permissions. |
System.Security.Permissions | Defines types that control access to operations and resources based on policy. |
System.Text | Defines types that support variouscharacter encodings,regular expressions and a more efficient mechanism for manipulating strings. |
System.Threading | Defines types that enablemultithreaded programming. |
The Runtime Infrastructure Library provides the services needed by a compiler to target the CLI and the facilities needed to dynamically load types from a stream in a specified file format.[9] It defines types in the following namespaces:
Name | Description |
---|---|
System | Defines types for theapplication domain,pointers,handles and more. |
System.Reflection | Defines types that provide a managed view of loaded types, methods and fields, and that can dynamically create and invoke types. These types are relevant to theprogram runtime. |
System.Runtime.CompilerServices | Defines types that provide functionality for compiler writers who use managed code to specifyattributes inmetadata that affect the run-time behavior of theVirtual Execution System. |
System.Runtime.InteropServices | Defines types that supportPlatform Invocation Services (P/Invoke). |
The Network Library provides simple networking services including direct access to network ports as well as HTTP support.[10] It defines types in the following namespaces:
Name | Description |
---|---|
System | Defines types that provide an object representation of auniform resource identifier (URI) and easy access to the parts of the URI. |
System.Collections.Specialized | Defines specialized and strongly-typed collections; for example, a linked list dictionary, a bit vector, and collections that contain only strings. |
System.Net | Defines types that provide a simple programming interface for a number ofnetwork protocols. |
System.Net.Sockets | Defines type that provide a managed implementation of theWindows Sockets (Winsock) interface for developers who need to tightly control access to the network. |
The Reflection Library provides the ability to examine the structure of types, create instances of types and invoke methods on types, all based on a description of the type.[11] It defines types in the following namespaces:
Name | Description |
---|---|
System | Defines thevoid type, a return value type for a method that does not return a value. |
System.Globalization | Defines type that provide information about a specific culture (called a locale for unmanaged code development). The information includes the names for the culture, the writing system, the calendar used and formatting for dates and sort strings. |
System.Reflection | Defines types that provide a managed view of loaded types, methods and fields, and that can dynamically create and invoke types. |
System.Security.Permissions | Defines types that control access to operations and resources based on policy. These types are relevant to thereflection. |
The XML Library provides a simple "pull-style" parser for XML. It is designed for resource-constrained devices, yet provides a simple user model.[12] It defines types in the following namespace.
Name | Description |
---|---|
System.Xml | Defines types for processingXML. |
The Extended Array Library provides support for non-vector arrays. That is, arrays that have more than one dimension orarrays that have non-zero lower bounds.[2] The Extended Array Library doesn't add any extra types, but it does extend the array-handling mechanism.[13]
The Extended Numerics Library provides support for floating-point (System.Single, System.Double) and extended-precision (System.Decimal) data types. Like the Base Class Library, this library is directly referenced by the C# standard.[3]
The Parallel Library provides easy parallelism for non-expert programmers, so that multithreaded CPUs can be exploited.[4]
The Vararg Library provides support for dealing with variable-length argument lists.[5]