Boxing is the process of converting a value type to the type object
or to any interface type implemented by this value type. When the CLR boxes a value type, it wraps the value inside a System.Object and stores it on the managed heap. Unboxing extracts the value type from the object. Boxing is implicit; unboxing is explicit. The concept of boxing and unboxing underlies the C# unified view of the type system in which a value of any type can be treated as an object.
Boxing
Boxing is used to store value types in the garbage-collected heap. Boxing is an implicit conversion of a value type to the type object
or to any interface type implemented by this value type. Boxing a value type allocates an object instance on the heap and copies the value into the new object.
Unboxing
Unboxing is an explicit conversion from the type object
to a value type or from an interface type to a value type that implements the interface. An unboxing operation consists of:
- Checking the object instance to make sure that it is a boxed value of the given value type.
- Copying the value from the instance into the value-type variable.
int i = 123; // a value type
object o = i; // boxing
int j = (int)o; // unboxing
Sources:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/programming-guide/types/boxing-and-unboxing
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