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Home/ Questions/Q 8540111
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 11, 20262026-06-11T11:31:28+00:00 2026-06-11T11:31:28+00:00

Say, we have 2 classes: public class A { public int a; } public

  • 0

Say, we have 2 classes:

public class A
{
    public int a;
}

public class B
{
    public int b;

    public static implicit operator B(A x)
    {
        return new B { b = x.a };
    }
}

Then why

A a = new A { a = 0 };
B b = a; //OK

List<A> listA = new List<A> { new A { a = 0 } };
List<B> listB = listA.Cast<B>().ToList(); //throws InvalidCastException

The same for explicit operator.

P.S.: casting each element manually (separetely) works

List<B> listB = listA.Select<A, B>(s => s).ToList(); //OK
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-11T11:31:30+00:00Added an answer on June 11, 2026 at 11:31 am

    The name of Enumerable.Cast is misleading as its purpose is to unbox values. It works on IEnumerable (not on IEnumerable<T>) to produce an IEnumerable<T>. If you already have an IEnumerable<T> Enumerable.Cast is most likely not the method you want to use.

    Technically, it is doing something like this:

    foreach(object obj in value)
        yield return (T)obj;
    

    If T is something else than the boxed value, this will lead to an InvalidCastException.

    You can test this behaviour yourself:

    int i = 0;
    object o = i;
    double d1 = (double)i; // Works.
    double d2 = (double)o; // Throws InvalidCastException
    

    You have two possible solutions:

    1. Use Select(x => (B)x)
    2. Create an extension method Cast that works on an IEnumerable<T> rather than an IEnumerable.
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