If I have an enum...
public enum Frequency {
OneOff = 0,
Monthly = 1,
Quarterly = 2,
Annually = 3
}
...then I can do something like this...
int n = (int)Frequency.Annually;
Given that since C# 7.3, we are able to use Enum as a generic constraint, I expected to be able to do this...
public void Stuff<T>(T val) where T : Enum {
int v = (int)val;
}
...but the compiler complains, saying it can't convert type T to int.
Anyone able to explain this to me? The generic constraint tells the compiler that T is an enum, and (unless you specifically do it differently) an enum value can be cast to an int.
enum can be a long or other things
public static void Stuff<T>(T val) where T : System.Enum, IConvertible
{
int v = val.ToInt32(null);
}
This works
If you look at Enum you can see that its not stated as an int. The actual base classes and implementations are:
public abstract class Enum : ValueType, IComparable, IFormattable, IConvertible
BTW: prefer long over int since longs are used as Flags in enumns to allow 64 flags
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