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Home/ Questions/Q 151257
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T09:25:15+00:00 2026-05-11T09:25:15+00:00

Given the following routine: private static object ParseNumber(string token, FieldDefinition def) { if (def.Fraction

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Given the following routine:

private static object ParseNumber(string token, FieldDefinition def) {   if (def.Fraction > 0)     return Double.Parse(token);   else     return Int64.Parse(token); } 

Resharper offers me the option to refactor it into a statement with the ternary operator:

private static object ParseNumber(string token, FieldDefinition def) {   return def.Fraction > 0 ? Double.Parse(token) : Int64.Parse(token); } 

Who can spot the trap?

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  1. 2026-05-11T09:25:16+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 9:25 am

    Okay, change to previous answer. Because there’s an implicit conversion from Int64 to Double (but not vice versa), that will be the result type of the expression. So when you expect to get a boxed Int64, you actually get a boxed Double (but with a value which originally came from Int64.Parse).

    Just in case that’s not clear enough, let’s change all the return statements such that they just return a variable. Here’s the original code:

    private static object ParseNumber(string token, FieldDefinition def) {   if (def.Fraction > 0)     return Double.Parse(token);   else     return Int64.Parse(token); } 

    Convert that appropriately:

    private static object ParseNumber(string token, FieldDefinition def) {   if (def.Fraction > 0)   {     double d = Double.Parse(token);     object boxed = d; // Result is a boxed Double     return boxed;   }   else   {     long l = Int64.Parse(token);     object boxed = l; // Result is a boxed Int64     return boxed;   } } 

    And now let’s do the same to the version with the conditional operator:

    private static object ParseNumber(string token, FieldDefinition def) {   return def.Fraction > 0 ? Double.Parse(token) : Int64.Parse(token); } 

    becomes

    private static object ParseNumber(string token, FieldDefinition def) {   // The Int64.Parse branch will implicitly convert to Double   double d = def.Fraction > 0 ? Double.Parse(token) : Int64.Parse(token);   object boxed = d; // *Always* a Double   return boxed; } 

    EDIT: As requested, a bit more information. The type of a conditional expression of the form

    X ? Y : Z 

    depends on the types of Y and Z, which I’ll call TY and TZ. There are a few options:

    • TY and TZ are the same type: result is that type
    • There’s an implicit conversion from TY to TZ but not from TZ to TY: the result is of type TZ and the conversion is used if the first branch is used.
    • There’s an implicit conversion from TZ to TY but not from TY to TZ: the result is of type TY and the conversion is used if the second branch is used.
    • There’s an implicit conversion in both directions: compile-time error
    • There are no conversions either way: compile-time error

    Does that help?

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