Wondering
Wondering

Reputation: 5076

why downcast fails at runtime

I want to know why below downcast fails @ run time:

case 1:

Object y = 10.23;
Console.WriteLine(y.GetType()); //System.Double
int z = (int)y;// fails @ runtime
Console.ReadKey();

case 2:

Double y = 10.23;
Console.WriteLine(y.GetType());//System.Double
int z = (int)y;//success
Console.ReadKey();

In both the cases the type of y is System.Double, still why downcst fails in first case?

Upvotes: 3

Views: 536

Answers (1)

Marc Gravell
Marc Gravell

Reputation: 1062630

In the first example; unboxing (what you show) is different to downcasting or conversion; it is perhaps unfortunate that C# uses the same syntax for all 3.

You must unbox value-types (such as int/double) correctly. Or use Convert.ToInt32(y) which has the logic for this embedded.

In the second example, this is a conversion (not an unbox, and not a downcast). Conversions are defined either in the language spec (like in this case) or via custom static operators.

The difference is object. The box changes everything.

Upvotes: 11

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