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Home/ Questions/Q 1089301
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T23:12:02+00:00 2026-05-16T23:12:02+00:00

ArgumentException argumentException = (ArgumentException)new Exception(); throws: System.InvalidCastException: Unable to cast object of type ‘System.Exception’

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ArgumentException argumentException = (ArgumentException)new Exception();

throws:

System.InvalidCastException: Unable to cast object of type ‘System.Exception’ to type ‘System.ArgumentException’.

Why can I not cast an Exception (less definition, I would think) to an ArgumentException (more definition, I would think)?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T23:12:03+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 11:12 pm

    That’s like trying to do:

    FileStream stream = (FileStream) new object();
    

    What file would it read from or write to?

    You can only cast a reference to a type if the actual object is that type or has that type in its hierarchy. So this will work:

    Exception exception = new ArgumentException();
    ArgumentException argumentException = (ArgumentException) exception;
    

    and this will work too:

    Exception exception = new ArgumentOutOfRangeException();
    // An ArgumentOutOfRangeException *is* an ArgumentException
    ArgumentException argumentException = (ArgumentException) exception;
    

    but your example won’t because an instance of just System.Exception isn’t an instance of System.ArgumentException.

    Note that this has nothing to do with exceptions, really – the same logic is applied for all reference types. (With value types there’s also boxing/unboxing to consider. Oh, and there’s also potentially user-defined conversions, e.g. from XElement to string – but we’ll leave those out of it too for the moment.)

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