The following doesn't work, of course. Is there a possible way, which is pretty similar like this?
Type newObjectType = typeof(MyClass);
var newObject = givenObject as newObjectType;
newObjectType
is an instance of the Type
class (containing metadata about the type) not the type itself.
This should work
var newObject = givenObject as MyClass;
OR
var newObject = (MyClass) givenObject;
Casting to an instance of a type really does not make sense since compile time has to know what the variable type should be while instance of a type is a runtime concept.
The only way var
can work is that the type of the variable is known at compile-time.
Casting generally is a compile-time concept, i.e. you have to know the type at compile-time.
Type Conversion is a runtime concept.
If you need to make a call using a variable of the type and you do not know the type at compile time, you can use reflection: use Invoke
method of the MethodInfo
on the type instance.
object myString = "Ali";
Type type = myString.GetType();
MethodInfo methodInfo = type.GetMethods().Where(m=>m.Name == "ToUpper").First();
object invoked = methodInfo.Invoke(myString, null);
Console.WriteLine(invoked);
Console.ReadLine();
MyClass
? Because that's not true at all.
givenField = givenField as NewType
and I wondered that this givenField still lacks of a field which is just given in NewType
, afterwards. But your answer gave me the clue. Sorry.^^
Jan 25, 2012 at 15:46
MethodInfo.Invoke
still doesn't answer the question.
You can check if the type is present with IsAssignableFrom
if(givenObject.GetType().IsAssignableFrom(newObjectType))
But you can't use var here because type isn't known at compile time.
I recently had the case, that I needed to generate some code like in Tomislav's answer. Unfortunately during generation time the type T was unknown. However, a variable containing an instance of that type was known. A solution dirty hack/ workaround for that problem would be:
public void CastToMyType<T>(T hackToInferNeededType, object givenObject) where T : class
{
var newObject = givenObject as T;
}
Then this can be called by CastToMyType(instanceOfNeededType, givenObject)
and let the compiler infer T.
You can use Convert.ChangeType. According to msdn, it
returns an object of a specified type whose value is equivalent to a specified object.
You could try the code below:
Type newObjectType = typeof(MyClass);
var newObject = Convert.ChangeType(givenObject, newObjectType);
newObjectType
must implement the IConvertible
interface. Otherwise, it throws System.InvalidCastException
.
Jan 10, 2020 at 20:46
Maybe you can solve this using generics.
public void CastToMyType<T>(object givenObject) where T : class
{
var newObject = givenObject as T;
}
CastToMyType()
with a type retrieved at runtime. You are essentially trying to do this: CastToMyType<someVar.GetType()>()
which is not possible.
May 15, 2014 at 15:04
MyClass<T>
, and thenvar newObject = givenObject as T
.