I seemed to have stumbled upon something unusual within C# that I don't fully understand. Say I have the following enum defined:
public enum Foo : short
{
// The values aren't really important
A,
B
}
If I declare an array of Foo
or retrieve one through Enum.GetValues
, I'm able to successfully cast it to both IEnumerable<short>
and IEnumerable<ushort>
. For example:
Foo[] values = Enum.GetValues( typeof( Foo ) );
// This cast succeeds as expected.
var asShorts = (IEnumerable<short>) values;
// This cast also succeeds, which wasn't expected.
var asUShorts = (IEnumerable<ushort>) values;
// This cast fails as expected:
var asInts = (IEnumerable<int>) values;
This happens for other underlying types as well. Arrays of enums always seem to be castable to both the signed and unsigned versions of the underlying integral type.
I'm at a loss for explaining this behavior. Is it well-defined behavior or have I just stumbled onto a peculiar quirk of the language or CLR?
It's not just IEnumerable<T>
- you can cast it to the array type as well, so long as you fool the compiler first:
public enum Foo : short
{
A, B
}
class Test
{
static void Main()
{
Foo[] foo = new Foo[10];
short[] shorts = (short[]) (object) foo;
ushort[] ushorts = (ushort[]) (object) foo;
}
}
The C# language provides no expectation of this conversion being feasible, but the CLR is happy to do it. The reverse is true too - you could cast from a short[]
to a Foo[]
. Oh, and if you had another enum with the same underlying type, you could cast to that, too. Basically, the CLR knows that all of these types are just 16-bit integers - all bit patterns are valid values, even though they'll have different meanings - so it lets you treat one type as another. I don't think that's documented in the CLI specification - I couldn't find any reference to it, anyway.
This can cause some interesting problems when optimizations in LINQ (in Cast<>
and ToList
) are combined, just for the record.
For example:
int[] foo = new int[10];
var list = foo.Cast<uint>().ToList();
You might expect this to come up with an InvalidCastException
(as it does if you start with a List<int>
with any values, for example) but instead you end up with:
Unhandled Exception: System.ArrayTypeMismatchException: Source array type cannot be assigned to destination array type.
at System.Array.Copy(Array sourceArray, Int32 sourceIndex, Array destinationArray, Int32 destinationIndex, Int32 length, Boolean reliable)
at System.SZArrayHelper.CopyTo[T](T[] array, Int32 index)
at System.Collections.Generic.List`1..ctor(IEnumerable`1 collection)
at System.Linq.Enumerable.ToList[TSource](IEnumerable`1 source)
at Test.Main()
That's because the Cast
operation has checked and found that the int[]
is already a uint[]
, so it's passed it right along to ToList()
, which then tries to use Array.Copy
, which does notice the difference. Ouch!
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