Using Casting null doesn't compile as inspiration, and from Eric Lippert’s comment:
That demonstrates an interesting case. “uint x = (int)0;” would
succeed even though int is not implicitly convertible to uint.
We know this doesn’t work, because object can’t be assigned to string:
string x = (object)null;
But this does, although intuitively it shouldn’t:
uint x = (int)0;
Why does the compiler allow this case, when int isn’t implicitly convertible to uint?
Integer constant conversions are treated as very special by the C# language; here’s section 6.1.9 of the specification:
This permits you to do things like:
which would otherwise require an ugly explicit conversion: