Last edited Apr 30 at 10:06 PM by ndelgado, version 14

Comments

gmelnik Apr 4 at 11:11 PM 
@RajaLakshman You can keep using the Caching Application Block with .NET4.0 or .NET4.5. We've tested it and it works. As far as the V6 release is concerned, I've explained our reasoning in this post on deprecation - http://blogs.msdn.com/b/agile/archive/2011/04/08/on-deprecation.aspx
We are a small team and we cannot carry the blocks forward indefinitely, especially when most of the scenarios originally addressed by a particular block are now supported by the .Net framework itself. That would prevent us from innovating on the new challenges and the new stories.

gmelnik Apr 4 at 11:07 PM 
@linny_ly, yes, they are.

linny_ly Apr 3 at 8:40 PM 
Is Visual Studio 2012 and .Net 4.5 supported with Microsoft Enterprise Library 6.0?

RajaLakshman Mar 16 at 9:00 AM 
I am disappointed that the Caching Application Block is going to be deprecated in future versions. We use it extensively and it is working really well. I would like it to be supported in future versions too. I know that System.Runtime.Caching is there now in .Net 4.0 - however the ability to have a database backing store without a lot of effort makes the Caching Application Block really good. So please don't give up on that. Thanks

Raja Lakshman

itkm Dec 25, 2012 at 5:50 AM 
I need this lib.