I’m working through Josh Smith’s CommandSink code obviously do not understand something about the ‘as’ keyword in C#.
I don’t understand why he wrote the line:
IsValid = _fe != null || _fce != null;
since he only needed to write:
IsValid = depObj != null;
Since it would never be the case the _fe would be null and _fce not null, or visa versa, right? Or am I missing something about how ‘as’ casts variables?
class CommonElement { readonly FrameworkElement _fe; readonly FrameworkContentElement _fce; public readonly bool IsValid; public CommonElement(DependencyObject depObj) { _fe = depObj as FrameworkElement; _fce = depObj as FrameworkContentElement; IsValid = _fe != null || _fce != null; } ...
ANSWER:
The answer is what Marc said in his comment ‘that is the whole point of ‘as’ – it won’t throw an exception – it just reports null.’
and here is the proof:
using System; namespace TestAs234 { class Program { static void Main(string[] args) { Customer customer = new Customer(); Employee employee = new Employee(); Person.Test(customer); Person.Test(employee); Console.ReadLine(); } } class Person { public static void Test(object obj) { Person person = obj as Customer; if (person == null) { Console.WriteLine('person is null'); } else { Console.WriteLine('person is of type {0}', obj.GetType()); } } } class Customer : Person { public string FirstName { get; set; } public string LastName { get; set; } } class Employee : Person { public string FirstName { get; set; } public string LastName { get; set; } } }
aswill return an object of the type you requested, if the operand is compatible. If it isn’t, it will returnnull. If you useasand it is possible that the cast will fail, you need to check to make sure the reference is valid.For example, if depObj was of type
String, it would not benull, but it would also not be able to be converted to either of the requested types and both of those variables would becomenull.