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In C#, Using an enum

public enum ShoppingCartType
{
    ShoppingCart = 1,
    Wishlist = 2,
}

public class foo
{
    public void bar(int parameter1,ShoppingCartType type)
    {
        //do something
    }
}

The following code compiles and runs peacefully

foo.bar(param1,(ShoppingCartType)30);

Without the cast, the following code will not even compile

foo.bar(param1,30);

Why does it make sense? The result is the same basically..

Why does casting int to invalid enum value NOT throw exception? Reed Copsey's answer explains why the first one works, and why it behaves this way.

But I don't see real difference between the first and second code snippets here, especially the second one seems more intuitive and hints this behavior.

Is there a way to change this behavior (before run time)?

(I'm not looking for a way to enforce the enum at runtime).

3
  • 1
    I am assuming it's a method whose second parameter takes a ShoppingCartType. Jul 19, 2014 at 13:09
  • Edited, hope it is clear now :) Jul 19, 2014 at 13:12
  • 1
    FYI - The first duplicate explains how to avoid the problem; the second explains why it is allowed to happen in the first place.
    – Rex M
    Jul 19, 2014 at 13:14

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