I would certainly be interested in starting an open source VS add-in that
has reflecting capabilities, it would provide more value than a stand alone
app. It would certainly be more difficult though.
It would also have been good if jetbrains bought it and integrated with
resharper :)
I think there is also Xenocode Fox (for commercial lovers), I know that you
can extract VS projects from dlls, but I haven't used it more than that.
On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 2:19 PM, Bill Barry <
after.fallout@...> wrote:
> I think it is more likely there will be integrated support with their
> profiler.
>
> Paul Batum wrote:
>
> I agree, this could easily work out to very good news. It would be awesome
> to get a fully integrated reflector experience in Visual Studio. I would be
> more than happy to pay money for that.
>
> On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 1:50 PM, Sebastien Lambla <
seb@...>wrote:
>
>> Reflector has never been open source, neither has testdriven.net
>>
>> I wish them well and hope they'll provide a commercial version, for
>> example
>> letting you dynamically step through decompiled code. THat would be a real
>>
>> time saver when dealing with unavailable code...
>>
>> --------------------------------------------------
>>
>> From: "Gabriel Schenker" <
gnschenker@... <gnschenker%40gmail.com>>
>> Sent: Friday, August 22, 2008 1:28 PM
>> To: <
altdotnet@... <altdotnet%40yahoogroups.com>>
>> Subject: [altdotnet] .NET Reflector now belongs to Redgate
>>
>> > after years of development Lutz Roeder obviously abandons it's flag
>> > ship an has given (sold?) it to Redgate.
>> > Although Redgate has annouced to provide a free version also in the
>> > future I fear that in the long run you will have to pay for the full
>> > version of Reflector.
>> > Do we have to say goodbye to another indispensable OSS tool? (see e.g.
>> > what happened to NCover and Testdriven.Net)
>> >
>> >
>> > ------------------------------------
>> >
>> > Yahoo! Groups Links
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>
>
>
>
--
Sidar Ok
http://www.sidarok.com