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Welcome to Software Development on Codidact!

Will you help us build our independent community of developers helping developers? We're small and trying to grow. We welcome questions about all aspects of software development, from design to code to QA and more. Got questions? Got answers? Got code you'd like someone to review? Please join us.

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This suggested edit was approved and applied to the post about 1 year ago by FoggyFinder‭.

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  • > Once the package is installed (either with nuget or paket), I have to manually add a reference to the project file (either by editing it directly or with dotnet add package).
  • You don't have to do that. Paket isn't really user-friendly so you may think you have to add reference to a package twice.
  • [`Paket`](https://github.com/fsprojects/Paket) is a dependency manager for .net projects but it's not the most used one.
  • Using just `dotnet cli` (or edit `.fsproj` manually) is more than enough for most cases. So best to avoid `Paket` until you get some confidence in dotnet world.
  • > Once the package is installed (either with `nuget` or `paket`), I have to manually add a reference to the project file (either by editing it directly or with `dotnet add package`).
  • You don't have to do that. Paket isn't really user-friendly so you may think you have to add reference to a package twice.
  • [`Paket`](https://github.com/fsprojects/Paket) is a dependency manager for .net projects but it's not the most used one.
  • Using just `dotnet cli` (or edit `.fsproj` manually) is more than enough for most cases. So best to avoid `Paket` until you get some confidence in dotnet world.

Suggested about 1 year ago by toraritte‭