Glad you like it! Feel free to pass any feedback on to me, my team owns it.

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Jano Petras
Sent: Thursday, May 8, 2014 4:14 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Microsoft Reference Source

Yeah, I've been looking through that few times. Last time had to provide an 
answer as to which randomisation method (out of standardised ones ANSI/IEEE 
etc) we use - and because we use Random class from the framework I went to 
check on it - and found a comment in there that says

//This algorithm comes from Numerical Recipes in C (2nd Ed.)


:) But yeah, interesting to see inner workings of the stuff we learned to rely 
on so heavily!




On 9 May 2014 09:09, Greg Keogh <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I just stumbled across this: http://referencesource.microsoft.com/ with all the 
.NET Framework 4.5.1 source code. I get the impression it's been there since 
late Feb 2014. There's some fascinating and bewildering stuff in there. Some 
classes you think might be quite simple are frighteningly complex, and vice 
versa. Some interesting #if and [Attributes] are scattered around -- Greg K

Reply via email to