I just tried a small code snippet to see how value type initialization works. Below is the code snippet
public MainWindow()
{
InitializeComponent();
int num;
char alpha;
//if (num == null)
//{
// // this is null
//}
//else
//{
// string value = num.ToString();
//}
}
Some codes are commented intentionally to build the project correctly. The compilation which was coming was
Use of unassigned local variable 'num'
I know all variables should be assigned before use. But when I debugged this found that num has the value 0. If this is by default initialized to 0 then why do we need to assign some value always before using it.
Would it have been a nullable
type I understand the risk of using a unassigned variable which will through an exception.
Now suppose I want to use the zero value of num which is already available without any assignment, why is it mandatory for me to initialize the num?
Someone can say that this is how .NET/C# works. But there must be some strong reason behind this. Can you please tell this reason?