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13.4 Retrieving a Type DirectlyYou can also retrieve a Type class by name (without needing an instance) using the static method GetType on the Type class. When specifying which type to retrieve, you can provide either the namespace-qualified name of the type, or the assembly-qualified name, as follows: Type t = Type.GetType("System.Int32"); Type t2 = Type.GetType("MyNamespace.MyType, MyAssembly); In the case in which you provide only the namespace-qualified name, GetType looks first in the calling assembly, and then in mscorlib.dll. Finally, C# provides the typeof operator, which returns the Type class for any type known at compile time: Type t = typeof(System.Int32); The main difference between these two approaches is that Type.GetType is evaluated at runtime and thus is more dynamic, binding to a type in an assembly by name, while the typeof operator is evaluated at compile time and thus is slightly faster, binding to a type in a specific assembly version via a type token. |
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