= Use = {{{ use use from }}} Specify a namespace and its contents to make available to this module. When using the first form if the compiler cannot immediately locate the namespace [[BR]] (i.e if its not in the list of default loaded libraries)[[BR]] it will look for a (platform dependent) library-name of the same form as the namespace. For .Net thats the namespace with '.dll' appended {{{ use Foo.Bar # On .Net will look for namespace in Foo.Bar.dll if not already available }}} If the filename of the library differs from the namespace, you can specify it with the second form. [[BR]] can be a simple identifier, qualified identifier (Foo.Bar) or a string literal. {{{ use Foo.Bar from SomeLib }}} You can put single or double quotes around the file name if its components are not legal identifiers.[[BR]] (for example, the filename has a space or punctuation mark in it). {{{ use Foo.Bar from "My Lib" }}} == Platform == On .Net will refer to a .Net Assembly or dll. No ".dll" extension is expected (or allowed) in any of this syntax. In .Net the list of default loaded libraries is: * System * System.Collections.Generic * System.IO * System.Text * !CobraCore (Cobra.Lang.dll) == Examples == {{{ use System.Windows.Forms use System.Drawing }}} == Notes == In most cases this syntax means you dont need to specify the commandline -reference switch With !MyProg.cobra containing ... use Foo.Bar Instead of compilation by cobra -reference:Foo.Bar !MyProg.cobra you can just say: cobra !MyProg.cob