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The C# 6 draft spec will be removed from the dotnet/csharplang repo.This will take place once all C# 6 pull requests have been reviewed and merged in the standards repo.The C# spec on will be replaced with the version from the standards committee.This will take place during the next month or two.Issues in dotnet/csharplang and dotnet/docs for the spec text will move to the new dotnet/csharpstandard repository.You’ll see the following changes over the coming months: NET Foundation means we can direct work to the correct place more easily. The addition of dotnet/csharpstandard to the. dotnet/csharpstandard is for the creation of the standard text that describes the C# language.dotnet/roslyn is for the implementation of the compilers and related tools.dotnet/csharplang is for language design and evolution efforts.
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The addition of dotnet/csharpstandard means there are now three different repositories related to the C# language. Work on incorporating the C# 7 features is taking place as well. This work merges the draft spec currently hosted in the csharplang repository with the current C# 5.0 standard text. You can see work in progress on the standard text for C# 6. What changes is that work now happens in the open, under the. The ECMA C# standards committee, TC-49-TG2 is still responsible for creating the proposed standard for the C# language. The end result will be a more accurate standard for the latest versions of C#. Even better, those conversations will be public. It will be easier to ask questions among the language design team, the compiler implementers, and the standards committee. Everything from language innovation and feature design through implementation and on to standardization now takes place in the open. NET Foundation, makes it easier for standardization work. Moving the standards work into the open, under the. Now, dotnet/csharpstandard completes the group, providing a public space for the ongoing work to document the standard for the latest C# language versions. The dotnet/csharplang split off to provide a dedicate public space for the innovation and evolution of the C# language. The C# compilers have been open source since 2014, now in the dotnet/roslyn repository.