| title | Getting Started in Visual C# .NET | Microsoft Docs | |
|---|---|---|
| ms.custom | ||
| ms.date | 08/02/2016 | |
| ms.prod | sql | |
| ms.technology | ||
| ms.topic | quickstart | |
| helpviewer_keywords |
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| ms.assetid | 37a22721-546c-453d-bc6f-238c13d7505d | |
| author | markingmyname | |
| ms.author | maghan | |
| monikerRange | =azuresqldb-current||=azure-sqldw-latest||>=sql-server-2016||=sqlallproducts-allversions||>=sql-server-linux-2017||=azuresqldb-mi-current |
[!INCLUDEappliesto-ss-asdb-asdw-xxx-md]
[!INCLUDEcsprcs] .NET is one of the managed programming languages that are supported by the common language runtime (CLR) in [!INCLUDEvsprvs] .NET. Many For more information about the C# language, see the [!INCLUDEvsprvs] .NET documentation. You can use [!INCLUDEvsprvslong] and [!INCLUDEvsOrcas] to develop SMO applications.
After you have started the [!INCLUDEvsprvs] project, you must add references to the SMO assemblies. You then import the required namespaces so that your program can recognize the SMO types.
In [!INCLUDEssCurrent], the SMO assemblies are located in the C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\130\SDK\Assemblies\ folder.