This cannot be typed to Exception because it's possible to throw objects in .Net that do not derive from System.Exception. This is not possible in C# or VB.Net but it is possible in other CLR based languages. Hence the API must support this possibility and uses the type object.
So while it shouldn't ever be null, it may not in fact be a System.Exception.
See CLI spec section 10.5 (specifically CLS rule 40) for more details
In addition to what Jared has already mentioned, you can safely cast to Exception
in .NET Framework 2.0 and higher if RuntimeCompatibilityAttribute(WrapNonExceptionThrows=true)
has been applied to your assembly (will be added automatically by the C# and VB compilers).
When this attribute has been applied, non-Exception "exceptions" will be wrapped in RuntimeWrappedException
.
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