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Home/ Questions/Q 93925
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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T23:25:15+00:00 2026-05-10T23:25:15+00:00

When using the ‘as’ keyword in C# to make a cast which fails, null

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When using the ‘as’ keyword in C# to make a cast which fails, null gets returned. What’s going on in the background? Is it simply suppressing an exception so I don’t have to write handling code for a failure?

I’m interested in the performance characteristics of it compared to a typical cast wrapped in a try-catch.

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  1. 2026-05-10T23:25:16+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 11:25 pm

    It’s using the IL instruction isinst to perform the cast instead of the castclass instruction that is used when casting. This is a special instruction which performs the cast if it is valid, else leaves null on the stack if it isn’t. So no, it doesn’t just suppress an exception, and is orders of magnitude faster than doing so.

    Note that there are some differences in behaviour between the isinst instruction and castclass – the main one being that isinst does not take into account user-defined cast operators, it only considers direct inheritance hierarchy, e.g. if you define the following two classes with no inheritance hierarchy but an explicit cast operator:

    class A {     public int Foo; }  class B {     public int Foo;      public static explicit operator B(A a)     {         return new B { Foo = a.Foo };     } } 

    Then the following will succeed:

    var a = new A { Foo = 3 }; var b = (B)a; Console.WriteLine(b.Foo); // prints 3 

    However the following does not compile, with the error ‘Cannot convert type ‘A’ to ‘B’ via a reference conversion, boxing conversion, unboxing conversion, wrapping conversion, or null type conversion’

    var a = new A { Foo = 3 }; var b = a as B; 

    So if you do have any user-defined casts set up (which are typically a bad idea on reference types, for this reason and others) then you should be aware of this difference.

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