I was doing some type conversion routines last night for a system I am working on. One of the conversions involves turning string values into their DateTime equivalents.
While doing this, I noticed that the Convert.ToDateTime() method had an overload which accepted a boolean parameter.
First question? Under what circumstances could this ever be useful?
I went a little further and tried to execute the method in QuickWatch. Either way ( true or false ), the routine returns an InvalidCastException.
Second question? Why is this method even here?
EDIT
Thanks for the answers, guys. I can see how it makes sense from a contractual point of view, but it does seem odd that the core framework includes methods that:-
- Can never work
- Worse, will actually throw an exception when someone tries to call it.
It’s a bit like someone making a car loaded with controls that actively stop your vehicle from working when used.
It makes sense because
ToDateTimeis part of theIConvertibleinterface implemented bybool. If you look in reflector you will see that it throws anInvalidCastException.Update (from
Convert):