= Introduction = Although you can explicitly declare the type of a local variable, you don't have to: {{{ # the long way: i as int = 0 # the short, easy way: i = 0 }}} The type of the variable on the left is taken to be the type of the expression on the right. This also works for object variables: {{{ class Person var _name = '' # typed as String var _age = 0 # typed as int }}} If the inferred type is not suitable, perhaps because you need a more general type, you can provide one explicitly or even typecast the right-hand side: {{{ class Person var _name = '' to dynamic var _age as int64 = 0 def foo i = 0 to int64 j as int64 = 0 }}} Sometimes you want the variable to be typed as a base class because you may assign other things to it in the future: {{{ shape = Circle() to Shape share as Shape = Circle() }}} = Generics = Type inference also occurs for the types of generic lists, sets and dictionaries: {{{ names = ['foo', 'bar'] # List numbers = {1, 2, 3} # Set shapes = {'circle': Circle(), 'square': Square()} # Dictionary }}} = If Expressions = If-expressions are typed based on their two possible expression results: TODO = Greatest Common Denominator = TODO = See Also = See also: AdditionalDoc, TypesOverview