My scenario should be simple... the type I want to convert FROM is ALWAYS 'string'. What I want to convert to... could be many things - ints, DateTimes, ... strings, etc.

This would be easy:

string valueToConvertFrom = "123";

int blah = Convert.ToInt32(valueToConvertFrom);

However... I don't know (until runtime) that the value I need to convert to is an 'Int' (or whatever). I have tried this:

string valueToConvertFrom = "123";

Type convertToType = typeof(int);

object blah = Convert.ChangeType(valueToConvertFrom, convertToType);

But that gives me the following error: "Object must implement IConvertible."

I don't want to have to do a switch statement and call "Convert.ToBlah" based on the type name... any suggestions?

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please reopen and add the answer that you found, in case someone else has the same or a similar issue in the future – Steven A. Lowe Nov 23 '08 at 19:50
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4 Answers

up vote 14 down vote accepted

the clean way to do it is using the a TypeConverter. you can get an instance of a type converter by calling the TypeDescriptor.GetConverter and then using the instance of the type converter to do the convertion. so something like this:

string valueToConvertFrom = "123";

Type convertToType = typeof(int);

TypeConverter tc =  TypeDescriptor.GetConverter(convertToType); 			

object blah =tc.ConvertFromString(valueToConvertFrom);
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1  
That is incorrect, these operations are not supported. Corrected code: Type convertToType = typeof( int ); TypeConverter tc = TypeDescriptor.GetConverter( convertToType ); object blah =tc.ConvertFromString( valueToConvertFrom ); – arul Nov 23 '08 at 20:26
@arul - you are right. fixed it. – Asher Nov 23 '08 at 20:31
This is brilliant. Thanks a bunch! – Stephen Nov 5 '09 at 16:19
Asher's answer does not apply to Silverlight (web or WP7x), where TypeDescriptor is not available. Also, TypeDescriptor only returns a TypeConverter for a Type that has defined a TypeConverter, which does not automatically apply to most Types. And the TypeConverter returned by TypeDescriptor is only the first one defined for the given Type. So you cannot generally rely on TypeDescriptor for conversion scenarios, to say the least. – Mark Jones Oct 29 '11 at 23:15
1  
Also remember that TypeConverter is not only an abstract base class requiring custom implementation if you're using it for custom class conversion, but it's also relatively slower than other mechanisms, since it's reflection/discovery-based. – Mark Jones Jan 12 at 21:29
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Timothy's question, as applied generally to the question of Type conversion in .NET, is a very big issue. While conversion strategies are somewhat straightforward in specific scenarios with known types, unfortunately there is no generalized strategy in any implementation of .NET to accomplish Type conversion at run-time from one arbitrary Type to another, nor is such a strategy forthcoming from Redmond. However, Microsoft supplies some good guidelines for the general concept of Type conversion, including:

I have had to deal with the same general issue in my systems, and as a solution I have consolidated all the standard strategies into one method. The scope of this issue is broad and the related conversion strategies are varied, so this consolidated approach can only be covered in a complete technical article. However, I offer here a copy of my method documentation in hopes this will help you get a firm grasp on the overall requirements you will need to address if you want to develop a similar, generalized solution. Here's the link to my documentation:

I hope this helps you out,

Mark

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String class implements IConvertible, this code simply SHOULD work. Which version of .NET are you aiming?

object o = Convert.ChangeType( str, convertToType );

Besides, most of the types you mentioned implement Parse method, so your best shot might be something like this.

Type convertToType = ...;
MethodInfo mi = convertToType.GetMethod("Parse", BindingFlags.Static);
object blah;
if(mi != null)
{
    blah = mi.Invoke(null, new object[]{valueToConvertFrom});
}
else
{
    // the type doesn't implement the Parse method, handle it another way :/
}
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this looks like and feels like a hack... – Asher Nov 23 '08 at 20:16
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The reason why I closed this is because my code had a bug in it... I was pulling from the wrong field initially, and that field didn't implement IConvertible.

+1 for both answers... "String class implements IConvertible, this code simply SHOULD work" that's true. But Asher's solution is great as I learned something new (and it's a very clean solution).

Thanks again!

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