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I have an IDataRecord reader that I'm retrieving a decimal from as follows:

decimal d = (decimal)reader[0];

For some reason this throws an invalid cast exception saying that the "Specified cast is not valid."

When I do reader[0].GetType() it tells me that it is an Int32. As far as I know, this shouldn't be a problem....

I've tested this out by this snippet which works just fine.

int i = 3750;
decimal d = (decimal)i;

This has left me scratching my head wondering why it is failing to unbox the int contained in the reader as a decimal.

Does anyone know why this might be occurring? Is there something subtle I'm missing?

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2 Answers

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You can only unbox a value type to its original type (and the nullable version of that type).

By the way, this is valid (just a shorthand for your two line version):

object i = 4;
decimal d = (decimal)(int)i; // works even w/o decimal as it's a widening conversion

For the reason behind this read this Eric Lippert's blog entry: Representation and Identity

Personally, I categorize things done by cast syntax into four different types of operation (they all have different IL instructions):

  1. Boxing (box IL instruction) and unboxing (unbox IL instruction)
  2. Casting through the inhertiance hierarchy (like dynamic_cast<Type> in C++, uses castclass IL instruction to verify)
  3. Casting between primitive types (like static_cast<Type> in C++, there are plenty of IL instructions for different types of casts between primitive types)
  4. Calling user defined conversion operators (at the IL level they are just method calls to the appropriate op_XXX method).
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In a sense it's a shame that unboxing and casting syntactically look identical, since they are very different operations. – jerryjvl Jul 6 at 1:59
Thanks Mehrdad. Your explanation and link to Eric's blog was quite helpful. – mezoid Jul 6 at 2:29
Thank you! This threw me for a loop. – Darryl Sep 24 at 19:18
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There is no problem in casting an int to decimal, but when you are unboxing an object you have to use the exact type that the object contains.

To unbox the int value into a decimal value, you first unbox it as an int, then cast it to decimal:

decimal d = (decimal)(int)reader[0];

The IDataRecord interface also has methods for unboxing the value:

decimal d = (decimal)reader.GetInt32(0);
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Thanks for your response too Guffa...it was very helpful. – mezoid Jul 6 at 2:30

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