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Home/ Questions/Q 8425543
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T04:17:58+00:00 2026-06-10T04:17:58+00:00

I have an enum like: public enum Test:int { A=1, B=2 } So here

  • 0

I have an enum like:

public enum Test:int
{
   A=1, 
   B=2
}

So here I know my enum is an int type but if I want to do something like following:

int a = Test.A;

this doesn’t work.

If I have a class like:

public class MyTest
{
    public static int A =1;
}

I can say ,

int a = MyTest.A;

Here I don’t need to cast A to int explicitly.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T04:18:00+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 4:18 am

    With your updated example:

    public class MyTest
    {
        public static int A =1;
    }
    

    And usage:

    int a = MyTest.A;
    

    That’s not how enums look. Enums look more like (comments are places where we differ from a real enum):

    public struct MyTest /* Of course, this isn't correct, because we'll inherit from System.ValueType. An enum should inherit from System.Enum */
    {
        private int _value; /* Should be marked to be treated specially */
        private MyTest(int value) /* Doesn't need to exist, since there's some CLR fiddling */
        {
           _value = value;
        }
    
        public static explicit operator int(MyTest value) /* CLR provides conversions automatically */
        {
           return value._value;
        }
        public static explicit operator MyTest(int value) /* CLR provides conversions automatically */
        {
           return new MyTest(value);
        }
    
        public static readonly MyTest A = new MyTest(1); /* Should be const, not readonly, but we can't do a const of a custom type in C#. Also, is magically implicitly converted without calling a constructor */
    
        public static readonly MyTest B = new MyTest(2); /* Ditto */
    }
    

    Yes, you can easily get to the “underlying” int value, but the values of A and B are still strongly typed as being of type MyTest. This makes sure you don’t accidentally use them in places where they’re not appropriate.

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