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Home/ Questions/Q 3335664
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T00:02:39+00:00 2026-05-18T00:02:39+00:00

I have a question regarding Object type casting. Suppose we have: A a =

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I have a question regarding Object type casting.
Suppose we have:

A a = new A();
Object o = a;

As I know, what happens behind is that the compiler will copy the address of a and store in the memory area of o variable. Then,we can say that a and o are referencing to the same object.

If we do something like this:

String s = "abc";
int a = (int)s;

Then I understand that the compiler cannot copy the string value to the int memory area.

But if we have:

A a = new A();
B b = (B)a;

This might be ok at the compile time. However, a run time error may happen which is something like “cannot casting….”.

So, I dont understand what actually happen in memory that makes the above casting cannot be performed. Is it just copying the address of a to the memory area of b? If so, why it is not possible?
Or it will copy all the members of A to replace all the members of B?

Thanks

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T00:02:40+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 12:02 am

    The compiler does Static Type Checking meaning that if A and B do not belong to the same inheritance hierarchy, it would not allow a cast to happen between the two.

    Think about it, if they are not belong to the same hierarchy, even if compiler lets you cast an object of A to a type of B, since A does not inherit from B or its inheritors, you might want to invoke one of the methods of type B on the casted object and it will fail miserably at runtime.

    class A { }
    class B { 
        void Foo() { }
    }
    
    A a = new A();
    B b = (B)a;      // Compiler Error
    
    // Hypothetically, if above was allowed, the below would ALWAYS fail at runtime
    // Since there is no way the object "b" can handle this call.
    b.Foo();
    

    There is an interesting point exist here though, if B is an interface, the compiler would let the cast to happen even if they do not belong to the same inheritance tree:

    class A { }
    interface B { 
        void Foo();
    }
    
    A a = new A();
    B b = (B)a;      // Compiler lets this happens 
    
    // Even though A does not implement B, but still one of the base classes of A 
    // might have implement B and A inherits that so it might be able to handle this
    b.Foo();
    

    The reason for that is because A might be from a different hierarchy tree but there is still possible that A or one of its Base classes have implemented B so you might have a point by that cast and compiler would let that.

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