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Home/ Questions/Q 713079
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T04:55:15+00:00 2026-05-14T04:55:15+00:00

Why in Boolean type there are two fields with the same value? internal const

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Why in Boolean type there are two fields with the same value?

internal const int True = 1;
internal const int False = 0;
internal const string TrueLiteral = "True";
internal const string FalseLiteral = "False";

and

public static readonly string TrueString;
public static readonly string FalseString;

static Boolean()
{
    TrueString = "True";
    FalseString = "False";
}

in reflector generated code, methods don’t use those strings but:

public string ToString(IFormatProvider provider)
{
    if (!this)
    {
        return "False";
    }
    return "True";
}

would’t it be better to use those const values?

EDIT: in CIL there is no difference between using const strings and instance strings.

So when I declare a private const string = “a”, wherever in the application “a” is used, Jitter uses const value, or is it only in const string’s scope?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T04:55:16+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 4:55 am

    The reason is that public const variables can be problematic if their values are later changed. Since their values are directly replaced in the CIL, you may end up with two assemblies using different values for the same const. To avoid this, the type only exposes readonly variables (TrueString and FalseString).

    Internally, there is no problem: if you change the const values in the code, you will compile the assembly anyway. So this is the reason for the internal consts (TrueLiteral and FalseLiteral). This way, their assembly can take advantage of their higher speed.

    Since const variables are directly replaced by their values in CIL, you cannot see them in your reflector generated code. But they are indeed used inside ToString.

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