() Operator (C# Reference) 

In addition to being used to specify the order of operations in an expression, parentheses are used to specify casts, or type conversions:

double x = 1234.7;
int a;
a = (int)x; // cast double to int

Remarks

A cast explicitly invokes the conversion operator from one type to another; the cast will fail if no such conversion operator is defined. To define a conversion operator, see explicit and implicit.

The () operator cannot be overloaded.

For more information, see Casting (C# Programming Guide).

A cast expression can lead to ambiguous syntax. For example, the expression (x)–y could either be interpreted as a cast expression (a cast of –y to type x) or as an additive expression combined with a parenthesized expression, which computes the value x – y.

C# Language Specification

For more information, see the following sections in the C# Language Specification:

  • 1.6.6.5 Operators

  • 7.2 Operators

See Also

Reference

C# Operators

Concepts

C# Programming Guide

Other Resources

C# Reference