Casting DataTypes with DirectCast, CType, TryCast

Alex Essilfie picture Alex Essilfie · Apr 24, 2010 · Viewed 39.9k times · Source

Ever since I moved from VB6 to VB.NET somewhere in 2005, I've been using CType to do casting from one data type to another. I do this because it is simply faster to type, used to exist in VB6 and I do not know why I have to be using DirectCast if there is apparently no difference between them.

I use TryCast once in a while because I understand that sometimes casting can fail. I however cannot get the difference between CType and DirectCast.

Can anyone tell me the difference in plain simple English what the difference the two (CType and DirectCast)? Adding examples of where to use what as well would be helpful.

Answer

Hans Passant picture Hans Passant · Apr 24, 2010

TryCast and DirectCast are casting operators that directly map to the CLR's support for casting. They can quickly cast an object of a base type to a derived type or unbox a value of a value type. DirectCast throws an exception when the cast isn't possible, TryCast returns Nothing if it failed. You typically want to favor DirectCast to catch programming mistakes.

CType allows a superset of conversions, ones that the CLR frowns on. The best example I can think of is converting a string to a number or date. For example:

Dim obj As Object
obj = "4/1/2010"
Dim dt As DateTime = CType(obj, DateTime)

Which you'll have to use if Option Strict On is in effect. If it is Off then you can do it directly:

Option Strict Off
...
    Dim dt As DateTime = obj

Very convenient of course and part of VB.NET's legacy as a dynamically typed language. But not without problems, that date is Unicorn day at stackoverflow.com but will be a day in January when a Briton enters the string. Unexpected conversions is the reason the CLR doesn't permit these directly. The explicit, never a surprise conversion looks like this:

Dim dt As DateTime = DateTime.Parse(obj.ToString(), _
    System.Globalization.CultureInfo.GetCultureInfo("en-US").DateTimeFormat)

Whether you should buy into Try/DirectCast vs CType vs explicit conversions is rather a personal choice. If you now program with Option Strict On then you should definitely start using Try/DirectCast. If you favor the VB.NET language because you like the convenience of dynamic typing then don't hesitate to stay on CType.