1

In an interview i was asked to define output of the code below :

    byte data= 100;
    dynamic val = data;
    Console.WriteLine(val.GetType())

I answered that it would not change data type of val variable but when i tested in a console,actually it did ! val variable changed to System.Byte

But more interesting is that when you change val data type to int32,Nothing changed it is still System.Int32 !

    byte data= 100;
    int val = data;
    Console.WriteLine(val.GetType())

What is the logic of these conversions?

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  • 4
    dynamic != decimal Your title talks about decimal but your code uses dynamic
    – Steve
    Feb 28, 2020 at 20:28
  • The data type in the first snippet didn't change. byte is the same thing as System.Byte. In the second you actually did change the data type
    – user47589
    Feb 28, 2020 at 20:28
  • This is really duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/2690623/…... but since we have 2M rep answers it probably better to keep it separate... Feb 28, 2020 at 20:33

3 Answers 3

6

You've misunderstood what dynamic means. dynamic is a synonym for object. Would you be surprised at the behaviour of your program if you replaced dynamic with object? If not, then your question is answered; if yes, then explain in more detail what your confusion is.

4

The type of the variable itself is still dynamic as far as C# is concerned, and object as far as the runtime is concerned.

At execution time, the value of val is a boxed byte - because you asked it to copy the value from a byte variable.

In your second snippet, you're just using the fact that there's an implicit conversion from byte to int. It's not that "it is still System.Int32" - the value of data is a byte, and that is widened to int via an implicit conversion. That is changing the type.

4

Type dynamic behaves like type object in most circumstances:

The dynamic type differs from object in that operations that contain expressions of type dynamic are not resolved or type checked by the compiler. The compiler packages together information about the operation, and that information is later used to evaluate the operation at run time. As part of the process, variables of type dynamic are compiled into variables of type object. Therefore, type dynamic exists only at compile time, not at run time.

Why does Object.GetType() return byte? Because Object.GetType():

Returns the exact runtime type of the current instance.

And why does byte become System.Int32?

You are assigning byte value to int variable and this is why val has type int:

byte data= 100;
int val = data;
Console.WriteLine(val.GetType())

Byte is a range from 0 to 255. int is a range from -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647

So it is eligible to assign byte range to int range

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