Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 3rd Oct 2007 19:39 UTC, submitted by gonzo
.NET (dotGNU too) "One of the things my team has been working to enable has been the ability for .NET developers to download and browse the source code of the .NET Framework libraries, and to easily enable debugging support in them. Today I'm excited to announce that we'll be providing this with the .NET 3.5 and VS 2008 release later this year. We'll begin by offering the source code (with source file comments included) for the .NET Base Class Libraries, ASP.NET, Windows Forms, ADO.NET, XML, and WPF. We'll then be adding more libraries in the months ahead (including WCF, Workflow, and LINQ). The source code will be released under the Microsoft Reference License."
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Don't get too excited
by shiny on Wed 3rd Oct 2007 20:02 UTC
shiny
Member since:
2005-08-09

I support the idea behind the viewable source, but I strongly suspect it will be released under some kind of "read only" license, i.e. no compiling possible, etc.
Don't forget that Microsoft already released parts of the Windows NT and CE to some business partners before.

But IF they would release .NET under some kind of open source license, it could make quite a boom in the Java vs .NET case. But Microsoft is not that smart ;)