On Monday, 3 December 2012 at 23:53:26 UTC, deadalnix wrote:
On Monday, 3 December 2012 at 21:53:47 UTC, Walter Bright wrote:
I really don't know what issue you're trying to solve here.
The typeid's work fine - and interfaces are not objects.
Having the typeid for an interface be an object means you
cannot compare typeids of one interface to another interface.
You can't instantiate interface. So an underlying type MUST
exist. The whole point of typeid on expression is to discover
what is the dynamic type of things, otherwize you'd be using
typeid(type) not typeid(expression).
You cannot create interface instance with new operator because
interface object is not valid until it is actually some class
instance. But this does not mean neither that typeid operator for
interfaces should return dynamic type nor that interface can be
implicitly converted to Object - because interface instance may
be invalid:
import std.stdio;
interface I { }
void main()
{
I i;
// should be implicitly converted
Object o = cast(Object)i;
writeln(typeid(o));
}
and because presence of interface does not necessarily mean that
some class has implemented it.
This makes casting interfaces to object unsafe operation that
better should require explicit cast.