I’m working through installing the N2 content management framework in an ASP.NET website project.
The instructions at http://n2cms.com/Documentation/Content-enabling%20an%20existing%20site/The%20first%20content%20class.aspx recommend I create a lib folder to hold the required dlls. The very next step asks me to reference those same dlls – which will presumably add them to the bin folder! Thus my project will contain duplication copies of the dlls.
Can anyone suggest why this recommendation has been made?
Thanks
David
The project will not contain duplicates. The bin folder is where the output goes, but it is not considered part of your actual project and is not checked into source control.
By placing the DLLs in a lib folder, it makes it easier to distribute them with the source of your application and ensures that anyone else who gets a copy of your code, whether you send it to them or they grab it from source control, has the necessary DLLs to run the application. It also ensures that they are use the same version of the components that you used to create the software. If the DLLs require licensing, it can be a different story because anyone who wants to compile the project would need the licensing component for the DLLs installed on their workstation.
Basically, the main benefit I see is that it keeps all components used by your code in the same place, making your project one whole unit.