There is a lot of syntax sugar with Nullable<T>
like those:
int? parsed to Nullable<int>
int? x = null
if (x != null) // Parsed to if (x.HasValue)
x = 56; // Parsed to x.Value = 56;
And more.
Why if
condition with Nullable doesn't work?
if (x)
{}
It gets Complier error saying can't convert Nullable<bool>
to bool
.
Why it's not being parsed to if (x.HasValue && x.Value == true)
or something similar?
It's the most obvious usage for Nullable<bool>
x = 56;
is not parsed tox.Value = 56;
as the struct is immutable and.Value
is read-only. It's more ofx = new Nullable<int>(56);
if
statement, it should "obviously" be abool
. There are other things you can use withif
(overridetrue
) but seeing something "almost" boolean would suggest you want "almost" boolean behaviour but have a good reason for not just having a boolean, so "obviously" there's at least one way in which you don't want it to behave like a bool, why shouldn't that include use in anif
statement?