These are three terms each with specific uses:
- casting - changing one
type
to another. In order to do this, the
types must be compatible: int
-> object
; IList
-> IEnumerable
- parsing - typically refers to reading strings and extracting useful parts
- converting - similar to casting, but typically a conversion would involve changing one type to an otherwise non-compatible type. An example of that would be converting objects to strings.
A cast from one type to another requires some form of compatibility, usually via inheritance or implementation of an interface. Casting can be implicit or explicit:
class Foo : IFoo {
// implementations
}
// implicit cast
public IFoo GetFoo() {
return Foo;
}
// explicit cast
public IFoo GetFoo() {
return Foo as IFoo;
}
There are quite a few ways to parse. We read about XML parsing; some types have Parse
and TryParse
methods; and then there are times we need to parse strings or other types to extract the 'stuff we care about'.
int.Parse("3") // returns an integer value of 3
int.TryParse("foo", out intVal) // return true if the string could be parsed; otherwise false
Converting may entail changing one type into another incompatible one. This could involve some parsing as well. Conversion examples would usually be, IMO, very much tied to specific contexts.