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While going through some tutorials, I have encountered lines such as this:

((IDisposable)foo).Dispose();

Ignore the specific reference to Idisposable. I am curious as to why the parentheses are set the way they are and what they contain / do. I'm sure this is a very simple question to answer, but I have been unable to find the answer through searching, due to the generics of such a syntax. Help would be much appreciated, thank you.

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  • You might be wondering why you need to cast before you call Dispose, since you probably already statically know foo is an IDisposable. If foo's, type implemented IDisposable explicitly, then you can't directly call foo.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)
    – Tim S.
    Jun 26, 2012 at 14:07
  • To further extend @TimS's comment, the object is also not necessarily in the inheritance chain of what you are casting to/from as custom explicit or implicit cast operators can allow you to cast to/from completely unrelated types (though it has limitations, such as no interfaces allowed). Jun 26, 2012 at 14:11

5 Answers 5

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The first set of parentheses are casting it to an IDisposable object. For example

Object foo = new Object();
IDisposable ID;

Now ID = foo will give an error but ID = (IDisposable)foo will work.

The second set of parentheses allows you to access methods and properties of IDisposable objects, in this case the Dispose() method. If you type it out you will see that only once you have enclosed the second set of parentheses will intelisense show you the methods and properties of IDisposable objects.

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  • Start with foo
  • Prefix it with (IDisposable) to cast it to the requested interface
  • Put this in brackets to tell .net that foo is the thing to be cast, not the result of foo.Dispose()
  • Now add .Dispose() to address a method of the interface
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  • +1 Keyword: cast Jun 26, 2012 at 14:01
  • Will it always be an interface inside the parentheses before foo?
    – Ari
    Jun 26, 2012 at 14:02
  • No you can cast to any kind of object
    – Dan
    Jun 26, 2012 at 14:03
  • @jaykreeler No, it need not be an interface (but it will often be). It can be anything, that foocan be casted to. Jun 26, 2012 at 14:03
  • @EugenRieck And thanks to custom explicit / implicit cast operators, what foo can be cast to is not always visible in it's inheritance chain. Jun 26, 2012 at 14:12
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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.

0

It's just a shortcut when doing the conversion to IDisposable.

This...

((IDisposable)foo).Dispose(); 

is the same as this...

IDisposable i = (IDisposable)foo; 
i.Dispose();
0

The inner set of parentheses around IDisposable turn it into a cast, and then the outer set of parentheses ensure that the cast occurs before the call to Dispose().

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