What Is a Primary Listing?
The list is Chinese vocabulary, and the Chinese pinyin is qng dn, which refers to the list of detailed registration of related items, such as: Act 4 of Cao Yu's "Sunrise": "This is your salary list." [1]
- [qng dn]
- [Qing]: clear and detailed; accurate; clear at a glance
- [Dan]: Relevant items displayed in a certain order, such as menus, payrolls, etc.
- List qngdn
- [detailed list]
- Register the list of related items in detail.
- [Source]: "History of Qing Dynasty · Shixian Zhiyi": "The current lunar eclipse on August 15th of this year, I would like to calculate the new eclipse using the number to calculate the position of the eclipse, compared with the original one. "Proceed to present." Seventh time in the "Strange Status Quo Witnessed in Twenty Years": "Put a list of current accounts for more than two years."
- [Example]: The fourth act of Cao Yu's "Sunrise": "This is your salary list."
- Assembly manifest
- Each assembly, whether static or dynamic, contains a collection of data describing how the elements in the assembly are related to each other. The assembly manifest contains these assembly metadata. The assembly manifest contains all the metadata needed to specify the version requirements and security identity of the assembly, and all the metadata needed to define the scope of the assembly and resolve references to resources and classes. Assembly manifests can be stored in a PE file (.exe or .dll) with Microsoft Intermediate Language (MSIL) code, or in a separate PE file that contains only assembly manifest information. For assemblies that have an associated file, the manifest is merged into the PE file to form a single-file assembly. You can create a multi-file assembly with separate manifest files, or the manifest is merged into a PE file in the same multi-file assembly. The manifest of each assembly performs the following functions: * Enumerates the files that make up the assembly. * Controls how references to the type and resources of the assembly are mapped to files that contain their declarations and implementations. * Enumerate other assemblies that this assembly depends on. * Provide a degree of indirection between users of assemblies and users of assembly implementation details. * Render assembly readme. Assembly manifest contents The following table shows the information contained in the assembly manifest. The first four items (assembly name, version number, culture, and strong name information) form the identity of the assembly. Message: Description assembly name: A text string specifying the assembly name. Version number: Major and minor version numbers, as well as revision and build numbers. The common language runtime uses these numbers to enforce version policies. Culture: Information about the cultures or languages supported by the assembly. This information applies only to designating an assembly as a satellite assembly that contains specific culture or language specific information. (Assemblies with regional information are automatically assumed to be satellite assemblies.) Strong name information: If a strong name has been provided for the assembly, the public key from the publisher. List of all files in the assembly: The hash and file name of each file included in the assembly. Note that the directory that contains all the files that make up the assembly must be the directory that contains the files that contain the assembly manifest. Type reference information: Information used by the runtime to map type references to files containing their declarations and implementations. This information is used for types exported from the assembly. Information about the referenced assembly: A list of other assemblies that this assembly statically references. If the dependent assembly has a strong name, each reference includes the name of the dependent assembly, assembly metadata (version, culture, operating system, etc.), and public key. By using assembly properties in your code, you can add or change some information in the assembly manifest. You can change version information and informational attributes, including trademarks, copyrights, products, companies, and informational versions.