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Type of conditional expression cannot be determined because 'type1' and 'type2' implicitly convert to one another
In a conditional statement, you must be able to convert the types on either side of the : operator. Also, there cannot be mutual conversion routines; you only need one conversion. For more information, see Conversion Operators (C# Programming Guide).
The following sample generates CS0172:
// CS0172.cs
public class Square
{
public class Circle
{
public static implicit operator Circle(Square aa)
{
return null;
}
public static implicit operator Square(Circle aa)
// using explicit resolves this error
// public static explicit operator Square(Circle aa)
{
return null;
}
}
public static void Main()
{
Circle aa = new Circle();
Square ii = new Square();
object o = (1 == 1) ? aa : ii; // CS0172
// the following cast would resolve this error
// (1 == 1) ? aa : (Circle)ii;
}
}