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Home/ Questions/Q 826091
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T03:21:32+00:00 2026-05-15T03:21:32+00:00

Since I upgraded my project to visual studio 2010 project format, my C++/CLI project

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Since I upgraded my project to visual studio 2010 project format, my C++/CLI project is targeted to .net framework 4.0.

It is easy to switch the framework version to another version from a C# project, but I have no clue how to do this in a C++/CLI project, I see no setting for this in the project property pages.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T03:21:33+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 3:21 am

    This shows up when you press F1 in the Framework and References dialog:

    By default for new projects, the targeted framework is set to .NET Framework 4. The IDE does not support modifying the targeted framework, but you can change it manually.
    In the project file (.vcxproj), the default targeted framework is represented by the v4.0 property element. To change the targeted framework, unload the project, use a text editor to open the project file, and then change the value of the property element from v4.0 to another version that is installed on your server. For example, if you specify v3.5, which represents the .NET Framework v3.5, Visual Studio 2008 SP1 must be installed. Save and close the file, reload the project, and verify that the targeted framework is displayed in the property page.*

    That’s not terribly accurate on converted projects, you’ll have to add the <TargetFrameworkVersion> element yourself. Put it in the PropertyGroup labeled “Globals”:

      <PropertyGroup Label="Globals">
        <TargetFrameworkVersion>v3.5</TargetFrameworkVersion>
        <others...>
      </PropertyGroup>
    

    The story is different when you use VS2012 and up, the first version of VS that acquired the Platform Toolset setting in the General property page. You must then select “v90” to get a proper build that targets 3.5. It is however clumsy, you must have all intermediate versions of VS installed on the machine to have that selection available.

    Why you need VS2008 installed requires an explanation by itself. The core issue is that the C runtime library (msvcrt100.dll and up) contains .NET code to support managed code execution. The crucial detail is a module initializer that ensures the CRT is correctly initialized in program that uses C++/CLI code. That code always targets .NET 4 and since it is hard-baked into msvcrt100.dll (and up) you always have a rock-hard dependency on the v4.0.30319 runtime. You can only ever have a pure v2.0.50727 dependency when you use the old C runtime, msvcrt90.dll. You can only be sure that you have a msvcrt90.dll dependency when you use the compiler’s #include files of VS2008.

    Cold hard fact that it is pretty necessary to move to .NET 4 soon, you’ll struggle with build problems like this if you don’t. There are very few practical obstacles to that, .NET 4 is widely available for free on all targets you’d imagine. Overcoming the FUD that is associated with moving to a higher runtime version is generally only the real issue. No reasons for fear and doubt, it is stable.

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