Hehehe.... Okay now the default it was set to was: ("1.0.*") which gave me version #'s of something like 1.0.843.18662
So now my question to you is....where is the 843.18662 derived from? Does .Net no longer have the ability to do versioning by incrementation? Or do you have to manually change it every time, or let it put in whatever #'s it wants. Thanks all. -Blain -----Original Message----- From: dotnet discussion [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Mitch Walker Sent: Tuesday, April 23, 2002 10:30 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [DOTNET] Super stupid version question... (gotta love OWA) Let's try this again... Look for the <Assembly: AssemblyVersion("1.0.*")> attribute in the AssemblyInfo.vb source file. -Mitch -----Original Message----- From: Mitch Walker Sent: Tue 4/23/2002 10:29 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: Subject: Re: [DOTNET] Super stupid version question... -----Original Message----- From: Blain Timberlake [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tue 4/23/2002 10:26 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: Subject: [DOTNET] Super stupid version question... Okay, now I feel like an idiot, but I simply cannot find where you set the version # for a project in VB.Net. I'm looking for the graphical way to set it in the IDE, as per VB6. What am I missing here? Can you still set a version? Can you still set auto-increment? I might just be blind here, but I just can't find this. =Blain You can read messages from the DOTNET archive, unsubscribe from DOTNET, or subscribe to other DevelopMentor lists at http://discuss.develop.com. bjziٲz慰kx34DȽ˲ry34D젮m楤ج7zZ1颹۶ ǽ You can read messages from the DOTNET archive, unsubscribe from DOTNET, or subscribe to other DevelopMentor lists at http://discuss.develop.com.