1887

I've seen many people use the following code:

Type t = typeof(SomeType);
if (t == typeof(int))
    // Some code here

But I know you could also do this:

if (obj1.GetType() == typeof(int))
    // Some code here

Or this:

if (obj1 is int)
    // Some code here

Personally, I feel the last one is the cleanest, but is there something I'm missing? Which one is the best to use, or is it personal preference?

5
  • 104
    as isn't really type checking though...
    – jasonh
    Oct 8, 2009 at 0:48
  • 69
    as is certainly a form of type-checking, every bit as much as is is! It effectively uses is behind the scenes, and is used all over the place in MSDN in places where it improves code cleanliness versus is. Instead of checking for is first, a call to as establishes a typed variable that's ready for use: If it's null, respond appropriately; otherwise, proceed. Certainly something I've seen and used quite a bit.
    – Zaccone
    Aug 20, 2014 at 16:07
  • 21
    There is significant performance difference in favor of as/is (covered in stackoverflow.com/a/27813381/477420) assuming its semantic works for your case. Jan 7, 2015 at 6:46
  • @samusarin it doesn't "use" reflection. The GetType method you are linking to is in System.Reflection.Assembly -- a completely different method and irrelevant here.
    – Kirk Woll
    Aug 11, 2017 at 20:59
  • I think what RCIC meant is that type check is usually followed by a cast and in such cases the type check (i.e. is) can be saved: var castedType = otherType as CastedType; if (castedType != null) { proceed with using object of type CastedType }; Mar 14, 2020 at 21:18

16 Answers 16

2244

All are different.

  • typeof takes a type name (which you specify at compile time).
  • GetType gets the runtime type of an instance.
  • is returns true if an instance is in the inheritance tree.

Example

class Animal { } 
class Dog : Animal { }

void PrintTypes(Animal a) { 
    Console.WriteLine(a.GetType() == typeof(Animal)); // false 
    Console.WriteLine(a is Animal);                   // true 
    Console.WriteLine(a.GetType() == typeof(Dog));    // true
    Console.WriteLine(a is Dog);                      // true 
}

Dog spot = new Dog(); 
PrintTypes(spot);

What about typeof(T)? Is it also resolved at compile time?

Yes. T is always what the type of the expression is. Remember, a generic method is basically a whole bunch of methods with the appropriate type. Example:

string Foo<T>(T parameter) { return typeof(T).Name; }

Animal probably_a_dog = new Dog();
Dog    definitely_a_dog = new Dog();

Foo(probably_a_dog); // this calls Foo<Animal> and returns "Animal"
Foo<Animal>(probably_a_dog); // this is exactly the same as above
Foo<Dog>(probably_a_dog); // !!! This will not compile. The parameter expects a Dog, you cannot pass in an Animal.

Foo(definitely_a_dog); // this calls Foo<Dog> and returns "Dog"
Foo<Dog>(definitely_a_dog); // this is exactly the same as above.
Foo<Animal>(definitely_a_dog); // this calls Foo<Animal> and returns "Animal". 
Foo((Animal)definitely_a_dog); // this does the same as above, returns "Animal"
10
  • 43
    Ah, so if I have a Ford class that derives from Car and an instance of Ford, checking "is Car" on that instance will be true. Makes sense!
    – jasonh
    Jun 11, 2009 at 19:19
  • 6
    To clarify, I was aware of that, but I commented before you added a code sample. I wanted to try to add some plain English clarity to your already excellent answer.
    – jasonh
    Jun 11, 2009 at 19:25
  • 14
    @Shimmy if typeof is evaluated at compile time and GetType() is evaluated at runtime, then it makes sense that GetType() incurs a slight performance hit Dec 10, 2012 at 13:35
  • 10
    @PrerakK new Dog().GetType() is Animal returns false (and your other version as well) since .GetType() returns an object of type Type, and Type is not an Animal.
    – Maarten
    Nov 7, 2014 at 9:45
  • 1
    More generally, when you use is, if the result (either true or false) is known at compile-time, you get a compile-time warning. This means you should change your code! Example 1: void M(Dog d) { var test = d is System.Exception; } It can be seen at compile-time that a null reference or an instance of Dog can never be an instance of System.Exception because the involved types are class types and each class can have only one direct base class. Example 2: void M(int i) { var test = i is IConvertible; } It can be seen at compile-time that this is always true (i is never null). Jan 10, 2017 at 12:11
251

Use typeof when you want to get the type at compilation time. Use GetType when you want to get the type at execution time. There are rarely any cases to use is as it does a cast and, in most cases, you end up casting the variable anyway.

There is a fourth option that you haven't considered (especially if you are going to cast an object to the type you find as well); that is to use as.

Foo foo = obj as Foo;

if (foo != null)
    // your code here

This only uses one cast whereas this approach:

if (obj is Foo)
    Foo foo = (Foo)obj;

requires two.

Update (Jan 2020):

  • As of C# 7+, you can now cast inline, so the 'is' approach can now be done in one cast as well.

Example:

if(obj is Foo newLocalFoo)
{
    // For example, you can now reference 'newLocalFoo' in this local scope
    Console.WriteLine(newLocalFoo);
}
6
  • 5
    With the changes in .NET 4 does is still perform a cast?
    – ahsteele
    Mar 21, 2013 at 21:04
  • 7
    Is this answer correct? Is it true that you really can pass an instance into typeof()? My experience has been No. But I guess it's generally true that checking an instance might have to happen at runtime, whereas checking a class should be doable at compile time.
    – Jon Coombs
    Oct 8, 2013 at 2:13
  • 5
    @jon (4 yrs after your q.), no, you cannot pass an instance into typeof(), and this answer doesn't suggest you can. You pass in the type instead, i.e., typeof(string) works, typeof("foo") does not.
    – Abel
    Sep 20, 2017 at 1:30
  • 1
    I don't believe is performs cast as such, rather special operation in IL. Oct 22, 2018 at 20:20
  • 7
    We can now do if (obj is Foo foo) { /* use foo here */ } Apr 17, 2019 at 20:49
106

1.

Type t = typeof(obj1);
if (t == typeof(int))

This is illegal, because typeof only works on types, not on variables. I assume obj1 is a variable. So, in this way typeof is static, and does its work at compile time instead of runtime.

2.

if (obj1.GetType() == typeof(int))

This is true if obj1 is exactly of type int. If obj1 derives from int, the if condition will be false.

3.

if (obj1 is int)

This is true if obj1 is an int, or if it derives from a class called int, or if it implements an interface called int.

5
  • Thinking about 1, you're right. And yet, I've seen it in several code samples here. It should be Type t = obj1.GetType();
    – jasonh
    Jun 11, 2009 at 19:26
  • 5
    Yep, I think so. "typeof(obj1)" doesn't compile when I try it. Jun 11, 2009 at 19:39
  • 5
    It's impossible to derive from System.Int32 or any other value type in C# Dec 4, 2014 at 19:34
  • can you tell what would be typeof(typeof(system.int32))
    – Sana Ahmed
    Jun 27, 2018 at 12:33
  • 2
    @Sana, why don't you try it :) I would imagine though you get back an instance of System.Type that represents the type System.Type! Documentation for typeof is here: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/language-reference/… Jul 2, 2018 at 10:46
63
Type t = typeof(obj1);
if (t == typeof(int))
    // Some code here

This is an error. The typeof operator in C# can only take type names, not objects.

if (obj1.GetType() == typeof(int))
    // Some code here

This will work, but maybe not as you would expect. For value types, as you've shown here, it's acceptable, but for reference types, it would only return true if the type was the exact same type, not something else in the inheritance hierarchy. For instance:

class Animal{}
class Dog : Animal{}

static void Foo(){
    object o = new Dog();

    if(o.GetType() == typeof(Animal))
        Console.WriteLine("o is an animal");
    Console.WriteLine("o is something else");
}

This would print "o is something else", because the type of o is Dog, not Animal. You can make this work, however, if you use the IsAssignableFrom method of the Type class.

if(typeof(Animal).IsAssignableFrom(o.GetType())) // note use of tested type
    Console.WriteLine("o is an animal");

This technique still leaves a major problem, though. If your variable is null, the call to GetType() will throw a NullReferenceException. So to make it work correctly, you'd do:

if(o != null && typeof(Animal).IsAssignableFrom(o.GetType()))
    Console.WriteLine("o is an animal");

With this, you have equivalent behavior of the is keyword. Hence, if this is the behavior you want, you should use the is keyword, which is more readable and more efficient.

if(o is Animal)
    Console.WriteLine("o is an animal");

In most cases, though, the is keyword still isn't what you really want, because it's usually not enough just to know that an object is of a certain type. Usually, you want to actually use that object as an instance of that type, which requires casting it too. And so you may find yourself writing code like this:

if(o is Animal)
    ((Animal)o).Speak();

But that makes the CLR check the object's type up to two times. It will check it once to satisfy the is operator, and if o is indeed an Animal, we make it check again to validate the cast.

It's more efficient to do this instead:

Animal a = o as Animal;
if(a != null)
    a.Speak();

The as operator is a cast that won't throw an exception if it fails, instead returning null. This way, the CLR checks the object's type just once, and after that, we just need to do a null check, which is more efficient.

But beware: many people fall into a trap with as. Because it doesn't throw exceptions, some people think of it as a "safe" cast, and they use it exclusively, shunning regular casts. This leads to errors like this:

(o as Animal).Speak();

In this case, the developer is clearly assuming that o will always be an Animal, and as long as their assumption is correct, everything works fine. But if they're wrong, then what they end up with here is a NullReferenceException. With a regular cast, they would have gotten an InvalidCastException instead, which would have more correctly identified the problem.

Sometimes, this bug can be hard to find:

class Foo{
    readonly Animal animal;

    public Foo(object o){
        animal = o as Animal;
    }

    public void Interact(){
        animal.Speak();
    }
}

This is another case where the developer is clearly expecting o to be an Animal every time, but this isn't obvious in the constructor, where the as cast is used. It's not obvious until you get to the Interact method, where the animal field is expected to be positively assigned. In this case, not only do you end up with a misleading exception, but it isn't thrown until potentially much later than when the actual error occurred.

In summary:

  • If you only need to know whether or not an object is of some type, use is.

  • If you need to treat an object as an instance of a certain type, but you don't know for sure that the object will be of that type, use as and check for null.

  • If you need to treat an object as an instance of a certain type, and the object is supposed to be of that type, use a regular cast.

3
  • what is wrong with this if(o is Animal) ((Animal)o).Speak(); ? can you please give more details?
    – Emil
    Jan 10, 2017 at 22:11
  • 3
    @batmaci: it's in the answer -- it causes two type checks. The first time is o is Animal, which requires the CLR to check if the type of the variable o is an Animal. The second time it checks is when it casts in the statement ((Animal)o).Speak(). Rather than check twice, check once using as.
    – siride
    Jul 28, 2018 at 15:15
  • I found this an absolutely great explanation, thanks for clarifying! Nov 29, 2019 at 8:31
23

If you're using C# 7, then it is time for an update to Andrew Hare's great answer. Pattern matching has introduced a nice shortcut that gives us a typed variable within the context of the if statement, without requiring a separate declaration/cast and check:

if (obj1 is int integerValue)
{
    integerValue++;
}

This looks pretty underwhelming for a single cast like this, but really shines when you have many possible types coming into your routine. The below is the old way to avoid casting twice:

Button button = obj1 as Button;
if (button != null)
{
    // do stuff...
    return;
}
TextBox text = obj1 as TextBox;
if (text != null)
{
    // do stuff...
    return;
}
Label label = obj1 as Label;
if (label != null)
{
    // do stuff...
    return;
}
// ... and so on

Working around shrinking this code as much as possible, as well as avoiding duplicate casts of the same object has always bothered me. The above is nicely compressed with pattern matching to the following:

switch (obj1)
{
    case Button button:
        // do stuff...
        break;
    case TextBox text:
        // do stuff...
        break;
    case Label label:
        // do stuff...
        break;
    // and so on...
}

EDIT: Updated the longer new method to use a switch as per Palec's comment.

4
  • 1
    Using switch statement with pattern matching is advisable in this case.
    – Palec
    Jun 10, 2018 at 17:41
  • How would you cope with a is not ? In this particular code block? if (obj1 is int integerValue) { integerValue++; }
    – Verbe
    Feb 25, 2019 at 22:28
  • Ben, if I understand your question, I would just have an else statement to handle other cases since you can't put a not integer into an integer variable. :)
    – JoelC
    Feb 28, 2019 at 13:53
  • I needed to set an enum based on a type, but not use the actual variable. So, I just used the switch/case pattern matching with discards (_). e.g. case Button _:. Works great, much less noise than a big if statement. Jun 1, 2022 at 20:22
16

I had a Type-property to compare to and could not use is (like my_type is _BaseTypetoLookFor), but I could use these:

base_type.IsInstanceOfType(derived_object);
base_type.IsAssignableFrom(derived_type);
derived_type.IsSubClassOf(base_type);

Notice that IsInstanceOfType and IsAssignableFrom return true when comparing the same types, where IsSubClassOf will return false. And IsSubclassOf does not work on interfaces, where the other two do. (See also this question and answer.)

public class Animal {}
public interface ITrainable {}
public class Dog : Animal, ITrainable{}

Animal dog = new Dog();

typeof(Animal).IsInstanceOfType(dog);     // true
typeof(Dog).IsInstanceOfType(dog);        // true
typeof(ITrainable).IsInstanceOfType(dog); // true

typeof(Animal).IsAssignableFrom(dog.GetType());      // true
typeof(Dog).IsAssignableFrom(dog.GetType());         // true
typeof(ITrainable).IsAssignableFrom(dog.GetType()); // true

dog.GetType().IsSubclassOf(typeof(Animal));            // true
dog.GetType().IsSubclassOf(typeof(Dog));               // false
dog.GetType().IsSubclassOf(typeof(ITrainable)); // false
11

I prefer is

That said, if you're using is, you're likely not using inheritance properly.

Assume that Person : Entity, and that Animal : Entity. Feed is a virtual method in Entity (to make Neil happy)

class Person
{
  // A Person should be able to Feed
  // another Entity, but they way he feeds
  // each is different
  public override void Feed( Entity e )
  {
    if( e is Person )
    {
      // feed me
    }
    else if( e is Animal )
    {
      // ruff
    }
  }
}

Rather

class Person
{
  public override void Feed( Person p )
  {
    // feed the person
  }
  public override void Feed( Animal a )
  {
    // feed the animal
  }
}
7
  • 1
    True, I would never do the former, knowing that Person derives from Animal.
    – jasonh
    Jun 11, 2009 at 19:22
  • 3
    The latter isn't really using inheritance, either. Foo should be a virtual method of Entity that is overridden in Person and Animal. Jun 11, 2009 at 19:31
  • 2
    @bobobobo I think you mean "overloading", not "inheritance".
    – lc.
    Jun 11, 2009 at 19:42
  • @lc: No, I mean inheritance. The first example is a kind of incorrect way (using is) to get different behavior. The second example uses overloading yes, but avoids use of is.
    – bobobobo
    Jun 11, 2009 at 19:47
  • 1
    The problem with the example is that it wouldn't scale. If you added new entities that needed to eat (for example an Insect or a Monster) you would need to add a new method in the Entity class and then override it in subclasses that would feed it. This isn't any more preferable than a list if (entity is X) else if (entity is Y)... This violates the LSP and OCP, inheritance probably isn't the best solution to the problem. Some form of delegation would probably be preferred.
    – ebrown
    Jun 11, 2009 at 21:12
5

I believe the last one also looks at inheritance (e.g. Dog is Animal == true), which is better in most cases.

3

It depends on what I'm doing. If I need a bool value (say, to determine if I'll cast to an int), I'll use is. If I actually need the type for some reason (say, to pass to some other method) I'll use GetType().

1
  • 1
    Good point. I forgot to mention that I got to this question after looking at several answers that used an if statement to check a type.
    – jasonh
    Jun 11, 2009 at 19:20
1

I found checking if the type of something is equal to something is done by the following:

variableName.GetType() == typeof(int)

0

The last one is cleaner, more obvious, and also checks for subtypes. The others do not check for polymorphism.

0

Used to obtain the System.Type object for a type. A typeof expression takes the following form:

System.Type type = typeof(int);

Example:

    public class ExampleClass
    {
       public int sampleMember;
       public void SampleMethod() {}

       static void Main()
       {
          Type t = typeof(ExampleClass);
          // Alternatively, you could use
          // ExampleClass obj = new ExampleClass();
          // Type t = obj.GetType();

          Console.WriteLine("Methods:");
          System.Reflection.MethodInfo[] methodInfo = t.GetMethods();

          foreach (System.Reflection.MethodInfo mInfo in methodInfo)
             Console.WriteLine(mInfo.ToString());

          Console.WriteLine("Members:");
          System.Reflection.MemberInfo[] memberInfo = t.GetMembers();

          foreach (System.Reflection.MemberInfo mInfo in memberInfo)
             Console.WriteLine(mInfo.ToString());
       }
    }
    /*
     Output:
        Methods:
        Void SampleMethod()
        System.String ToString()
        Boolean Equals(System.Object)
        Int32 GetHashCode()
        System.Type GetType()
        Members:
        Void SampleMethod()
        System.String ToString()
        Boolean Equals(System.Object)
        Int32 GetHashCode()
        System.Type GetType()
        Void .ctor()
        Int32 sampleMember
    */

This sample uses the GetType method to determine the type that is used to contain the result of a numeric calculation. This depends on the storage requirements of the resulting number.

    class GetTypeTest
    {
        static void Main()
        {
            int radius = 3;
            Console.WriteLine("Area = {0}", radius * radius * Math.PI);
            Console.WriteLine("The type is {0}",
                              (radius * radius * Math.PI).GetType()
            );
        }
    }
    /*
    Output:
    Area = 28.2743338823081
    The type is System.Double
    */
-1

If you are only interested in the base types in an object and you need to handle it differently based on its type then you could do the following.

TypeCode typeCode = Type.GetTypeCode(value.GetType());

switch (typeCode)
{
    case TypeCode.Empty:
    case TypeCode.DBNull:
        return "";

    case TypeCode.Boolean:
    case TypeCode.Object:
    case TypeCode.DateTime:
    case TypeCode.SByte:
    case TypeCode.Byte:
    case TypeCode.Int16:
    case TypeCode.UInt16:
    case TypeCode.Int32:
    case TypeCode.UInt32:
    case TypeCode.Int64:
    case TypeCode.UInt64:
    case TypeCode.Single:
    case TypeCode.Double:
    case TypeCode.Decimal:
        return "do something";
        
    case TypeCode.Char:
    case TypeCode.String:
    default:
        return value.ToString();
}
-4
if (c is UserControl) c.Enabled = enable;
2
  • 6
    Please edit with more information. Code-only and "try this" answers are discouraged, because they contain no searchable content, and don't explain why someone should "try this".
    – abarisone
    Sep 6, 2016 at 14:33
  • Your answer is unrelated to the question.
    – menxin
    Sep 5, 2019 at 10:48
-5

You can use "typeof()" operator in C# but you need to call the namespace using System.IO; You must use "is" keyword if you wish to check for a type.

1
  • 10
    typeof is not defined in a namespace, it is a keyword. System.IO has nothing to do with this. Sep 18, 2015 at 0:13
-5

Performance test typeof() vs GetType():

using System;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
    {
    class Program
    {
        enum TestEnum { E1, E2, E3 }
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            {
                var start = DateTime.UtcNow;
                for (var i = 0; i < 1000000000; i++)
                    Test1(TestEnum.E2);
                Console.WriteLine(DateTime.UtcNow - start);
            }
            {
                var start = DateTime.UtcNow;
                for (var i = 0; i < 1000000000; i++)
                    Test2(TestEnum.E2);
                Console.WriteLine(DateTime.UtcNow - start);
            }
            Console.ReadLine();
        }
        static Type Test1<T>(T value) => typeof(T);
        static Type Test2(object value) => value.GetType();
    }
}

Results in debug mode:

00:00:08.4096636
00:00:10.8570657

Results in release mode:

00:00:02.3799048
00:00:07.1797128
4
  • 2
    One should not use DateTime.UtcNow for performance measures. With your code but with Stopwatch class I got persistently opposite results for Debug mode. UseTypeOf: 00:00:14.5074469 UseGetType: 00:00:10.5799534 . Release mode is the same, as expected Nov 25, 2015 at 3:46
  • @AlexeyShcherbak The difference between Stopwatch and DateTime.Now cannot be more than 10-20 ms, check your code again. And I don't care about milliseconds in my test. Also my code will be several lines of code longer with Stopwatch. Nov 25, 2015 at 9:21
  • 2
    it's bad practice in general, not in your particular case. Nov 25, 2015 at 9:23
  • 6
    @AlexanderVasilyev Amount of lines of code should never be used as an argument to do something documentedly misleading. As seen in msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.datetime(v=vs.110).aspx, DateTime should not be used if you're concerned about times below 100ms, since it uses the OS's timeframe. Comparatively with Stopwatch, which uses the processors' Tick, the resolution used by a DateTime in Win7 is a whooping 15ms.
    – Eric Wu
    Mar 6, 2016 at 5:54

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