iCal.NET is an iCalendar (RFC 5545) class library for .NET aimed at providing RFC 5545 compliance, while providing full compatibility with popular calendaring applications and libraries.
iCal.NET is available as a nuget package.
There's a guide just for you: Migrating from dday.ical
The wiki contains several pages of examples of common ical.net usage scenarios.
- Simple event with a recurrence
- Deserializing an ics file
- Working with attachments
- Working with recurring elements
- Concurrency scenarios and PLINQ
- Migrating from dday.ical
ical.net uses semantic versioning. In a nutshell:
Given a version number MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, increment the:
- MAJOR version when you make incompatible API changes,
- MINOR version when you add functionality in a backwards-compatible manner, and
- PATCH version when you make backwards-compatible bug fixes.
- Submit a bug report or issue
- Contribute code by submitting a pull request. Always open an issue first, so we can discuss necessary changes.
- Ask a question. Please never use the issue tracker for questions.
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We ask and encourage you to contribute back to the project. This is especially true if you are using the library in a commercial product.
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Questions asked in the discussion area are open to the community or experienced users to answer. Give maintainers a helping hand by answering questions whenever you can.
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Remember that keeping ical.net up is something ical.net maintainers and many contributors do in their spare time.
In case you need it, Rian Stockbower may offer paid support and bugfixes. A few basic rules to consider when asking for this kind of support:
- Any changes made to the ical.net library are open source, and will always be published on nuget for others to consume.
- You do not own the changes made to the library even if you paid for them.
- Congruence with the ical-org vision for the future of ical.net is required. That means we step back from things like "add Exchange interop", or take dependencies on third-party libraries that benefit only your one or very few use cases.
iCal.NET logo adapted from Love Calendar By Sergey Demushkin, RU