AssemblyVersion using * fails with error "wildcards, which are not compatible with determinism?"

C#Visual Studio.Net Core

C# Problem Overview


I can't use * in assembly version; when I do I get the following compilation error:

> The specified version string contains wildcards, which are not > compatible with determinism. Either remove wildcards from the version > string, or disable determinism for this compilation

SCRAssembly

C# Solutions


Solution 1 - C#

Add <Deterministic> tag with false value and use * for the 3'rd part of AssemblyVersion inside <PropertyGroup> in .csproj file:

<PropertyGroup>
	<ProduceReferenceAssembly>true</ProduceReferenceAssembly>
	<Version>1.0.0</Version>
	<AssemblyVersion>1.0.*</AssemblyVersion>
	<Deterministic>false</Deterministic>
</PropertyGroup>

"Deterministic" means something like - the compiler will use the same versions of the files if no changes have happened resulting in faster builds.

It is the AssemblyVersion (not AssemblyFileVersion) that you should use a wildcard in. If you provide AssemblyVersion with wildcard, just don't include AssemblyFileVersion at all.


Note also: There are two forms. One where the asterisk wildcard is in the third position (x.y.*) and one where it is in the fourth position (x.y.z.*).

x.y.* auto-generates the BUILD and REVISION numbers. BUILD is the "number of days since 1st January 2000" thus it only changes once each day. and REVISION is "half the number of seconds since 00:00".

Today, for example, an AssemblyVersion of '1.0.*' will generate a specific '7472', e.g. '1.0.7472.20737'. The 5-digit final number will be different every build, at least if changes.

This may be better than 1.0.0.* for support as it indicates age (.7300 would be almost 6 months old). The example, 1.0.7472.20737, means "this assembly was built on 2020-06-16 at 11:31:14".

Solution 2 - C#

I guess you were able to use it earlier and can't anymore.

Reason - There have been some changes to Visual Studio as the new project files now default to 'True' for 'Deterministic' attribute.

Solution - as Hans Passant says, edit project file by hand. Cons to doing it, also as he says.

Specifically, edit .csproj to <Deterministic>false</Deterministic>.

Source - https://marinovdh.wordpress.com/2018/10/22/68/

Solution 3 - C#

VS2019 can auto-create an .editorconfig file putting severity as 'suggest', which content is like this:

[*.cs]

    # CS7035: The specified version string does not conform to the recommended format - major.minor.build.revision
    dotnet_diagnostic.CS7035.severity = suggestion

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionLucyperView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - C#John DeerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - C#AnimeshView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - C#Airton J. ColombiniView Answer on Stackoverflow