The syntax:
var d = (IDisposable)foo;
Is called an Explicit Cast.
The syntax:
((IDisposable)foo).Dispose();
Explicitly casts foo
into a temporary variable and calls Dispose
on it (do note, a temporary variable is used here but you cannot see it, it is created by the compiler).
The brackets tell the compiler the order of precedence on the actions. In this case, it says to cast the variable to IDisposable
before resolving the Dispose
call. Because it is done before, the compiler now knows to resolve Dispose
on a variable of type IDisposable
.
You can see this behaviour in other forms:
(foo as IDisposable).Dispose();
Or:
string s = null;
while ((s = Console.ReadLine()) != null)
{
}
My first example casts using the as
operator in the same manner as your own cast (in-line). My second example sets a variable s
before proceeding to test it against null
.
My point being, none of these would compile without the use of brackets to define the boundaries.
foo
is anIDisposable
. Iffoo
's, type implementedIDisposable
explicitly, then you can't directly callfoo.Dispose()
, and you need to do this cast first. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms173157.aspx (@EugenRieck's answer answered the syntax, which was the main part, I figured this fit better as a comment)