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How does the CLR know the type of a boxed object?

When a value type is boxed, it is placed inside an untyped reference object. So what causes the invalid cast exception here?

long l = 1;
object obj = (object)l;
double d = (double)obj;

No, it's not placed in an untyped object. For each value type, there's a boxed reference type in the CLR. So you'd have something like:

public class BoxedInt32 // Not the actual name
{
    private readonly int value;
    public BoxedInt32(int value)
    {
        this.value = value;
    }
}

That boxed type isn't directly accessible in C#, although it is in C++/CLI. Obviously that knows the original type. So in C# you have to have a compile-time type of object for the variable but that doesn't mean that's the actual type of the object.

See the ECMA CLI spec or CLR via C# for more details.

Jon Skeet's answer covers the why; as for the how to get around it, here's what you have to do:

long l = 1;
object obj = (object)l;
double d = (double)(long)obj;

The reason for the dual cast is this; when .NET unboxes the variable, it only knows how to unbox it into the type it was boxed from ( long in your example.) Once you've unboxed it and you have a proper long primitive, you can then cast it to double or any other type castable from long .

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