If var keyword is resolved at compile time, how does the following work?
class A {
}
class B : A {
}
int k = 1;
var x = (k < 0) ? new B() : new A();
Edit:
I finally understood that the problem is not about the var itself, but about the behaviour of the ?: operator. For some reason, I thought that the following could be possible:
object x = something ? 1 : ""
and that's not possible at all :)
Related question (about ternary operator):
Simple C#: why assigning null in ternary operator fails: no implicit conversion between null and int?