0

Given the following snippet:

using System;

public void doStuff<T>() where T : class 
{
    Type foo = typeof(T).BaseType;
}

What Type does foo reflect? Does it represent the type given in the type parameter?

For example if I called doStuff<int>(), will foo reflect int's Type?

2
  • 1
    Shouldn't take more than a minute to check. Oct 25, 2017 at 3:40
  • If you need to use typeof in the method shown, then your method is not generic; therefore, having a generic method like this is not useful or generic. Oct 25, 2017 at 3:53

2 Answers 2

2

The metadata of BaseType says

// Summary:
    // Gets the type from which the current System.Type directly inherits.
//
// Returns:
    // The System.Type from which the current System.Type directly inherits, or null
    // if the current Type represents the System.Object class or an interface.
//

So if your class is not inheriting or is only implementing interface(s) then it would return Object, otherwise your Parent Class Type.

Food for thought: You cannot use int here as int is struct and not a class. and if you change your code to take struct then it would return System.ValueType.

1

.BaseType will return to you the type from which the current type you're evaluating directly inherits from. So if you passed in type B which inherits from type A, typeof(B).BaseType would return A.

As for the example, int is a value type, which is a struct. I believe structs implicitly inherit from ValueType.

As an aside, you would not be able to pass an int into the defined method because of the generic constraint limiting it to only classes, of which int is not along with all other value types.

Some links for more info:

MSDN BaseType

MSDN ValueType

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