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Home/ Questions/Q 220607
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T18:57:17+00:00 2026-05-11T18:57:17+00:00

Within a Visual Studio (2005/2008) Project I’d like to use an open source library.

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Within a Visual Studio (2005/2008) Project I’d like to use an open source library. I’d like to link to the binaries so that I’m not responsible for a proper build and can check those binaries into the source control server (SVN).

So far so good, but if I’d like to debug into the open source library or want to take a look at a class implementation I would be forced to add the the source of the project into my solution and than link my project to the source instead of the binaries.

Is it possible to tell Visual Studio a location of the source of a linked binary library so that things like “go to definition” and debug is working?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T18:57:18+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 6:57 pm

    There are multiple ways you can achieve this.

    1. Like gbjbaanb suggested you can use pdb symbols. It’s going to work for both managed an unmanaged code.

    2. If you’re using .NET you can debug with Reflector. Oran Dennison wrote how to debug with Reflector and Visual Studio. One of my favorite tools is TestDriven.NET. Author of this tool, Jamie Cansale, also blogged about how to debug with Reflector when you have TestDriven.NET. In his article, Jamie has a link to screencast where he demonstrates how to do it step by step.

    3. Last, if you use for your SVN client like TortoiseSVN, you can add files/directories from check in. More details how to Ignore Files and Directories with TortoiseSVN.

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