Microsoft 9GD00001 ユーザーズマニュアル

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Microsoft Visual Studio 2010: A Beginner’s Guide
As you can see in Figure 5-5, the Assembly Information from the project properties 
is included with the file. This is convenient for you (or an end user) to be able to open 
the file and read pertinent information, especially version information, to know you’re 
working with the correct assembly, for debugging, or just to know what is on your system.
Referencing Assemblies
All projects normally reference external assemblies. For example, System.dll is a .NET 
Framework assembly that contains all of the primitive .NET types and is normally included in 
every project. Each project type has a specific set of assemblies that appear in the References 
list. The assemblies that appear in this list are either required because of the type of project 
you are building or are optional and contain libraries that are commonly used for that type of 
project. You are free to remove assembly references if you like, but be aware that removing 
a reference to an assembly required for that project type is likely to result in your code not 
being able to compile.
Figure 5-5
  File Properties window