In C#, I want to initialize a string value with an empty string?

How should I do this? What is the right way, and why?

string willi = string.Empty;

or

string willi = String.Empty;

or

string willi = "";

or ?

UPDATE

Thank you very much for your answers. It seems, that even the easiest questions can start quite interesting discussions.

link|improve this question

3  
See also this similar discussion for java: stackoverflow.com/questions/213985/… – harpo Nov 4 '08 at 20:05
What's more important, is never to compare a string to Sting.Empty. <br>Bad: if(s == "") <br>Good: if(s.Length == 0) – Pavel Radzivilovsky Dec 21 '09 at 10:35
19  
better to use String.IsNullOrEmpty(string myString) though, surely? – ZombieSheep Dec 21 '09 at 10:36
1  
I use [string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(stringvalue)] ... works in .Net 4.0. To initialize, I simply use: [var text = "";] Simple, readable and takes the least time to type :) – jalchr Oct 7 '11 at 12:51
4  
What's more important is the hilarious name of your variable. – a12jun Nov 29 '11 at 10:34
show 1 more comment
feedback

22 Answers

up vote 175 down vote accepted

Use whatever you and your team find the most readable.

Other answers have suggested that a new string is created every time you use "". This is not true - due to string interning, it will be created either once per assembly or once per AppDomain (or possibly once for the whole process - not sure on that front). This difference is negligible - massively, massively insignificant.

Which you find more readable is a different matter, however. It's subjective and will vary from person to person - so I suggest you find out what most people on your team like, and all go with that for consistency. Personally I find "" easier to read.

The argument that "" and " " are easily mistaken for each other doesn't really wash with me. Unless you're using a proportional font (and I haven't worked with any developers who do) it's pretty easy to tell the difference.

link|improve this answer
24  
Your eyes can trick you when you are expecting to see "" you can easily mistake " " for "". This is why it is easier to edit something that someone else has written. Your brain doesn't have preconceived ideas about the text so it is easier to pick out the anonmalies. – tvanfosson Nov 4 '08 at 20:18
19  
@tvanfosson: So have you (or a colleague) actually been bitten by this as a bug? I'm suspicious of this sort of claim without it actually having caused problems. I've been using "" for years without ever getting it wrong... – Jon Skeet Nov 4 '08 at 20:27
9  
@Alan: I will try that to see what it's like. Personally I use spaces instead of tabs (and will fight to the death to do so ;) which I suspect makes it work less well for lining up bits parameters etc... worth a try though. – Jon Skeet Nov 4 '08 at 20:50
13  
Personally, I've always used String.Empty, I use capital 'S' whenever I want to use a static method on string, it's just a personal prefference that allows me to distinguish a type from a variable. But this is just a carry-over from using StringUtils.EMPTY in commons.lang from java. One point of interest is I'm almost blind and this definately does help with readability for me. – Brett Ryan Sep 11 '09 at 4:34
8  
You have given me the inspiration to start developing in Times New Roman. – Justin Rusbatch Feb 21 '10 at 18:39
show 18 more comments
feedback

Basically,

There really is no difference from a performance and code generated standpoint. In performance testing, they went back and forth between which one was faster vs the other, and only by milliseconds. In looking at the behind the scenes code, you really don't see any difference either. The only difference is in the IL, which string.Empty use the opcode "ldsfld" and "" uses the opcode "ldstr", but that is only because string.Empty is static, and both instructions do the same thing. If you look at the assembly that is produced, it is exactly the same.

C# Code

private void Test1()
{
    string test1 = string.Empty;    
    string test11 = test1;
}

private void Test2()
{
    string test2 = "";    
    string test22 = test2;
}

IL Code

.method private hidebysig instance void 
          Test1() cil managed
{
  // Code size       10 (0xa)
  .maxstack  1
  .locals init ([0] string test1,
                [1] string test11)
  IL_0000:  nop
  IL_0001:  ldsfld     string [mscorlib]System.String::Empty
  IL_0006:  stloc.0
  IL_0007:  ldloc.0
  IL_0008:  stloc.1
  IL_0009:  ret
} // end of method Form1::Test1
.method private hidebysig instance void 
        Test2() cil managed
{
  // Code size       10 (0xa)
  .maxstack  1
  .locals init ([0] string test2,
                [1] string test22)
  IL_0000:  nop
  IL_0001:  ldstr      ""
  IL_0006:  stloc.0
  IL_0007:  ldloc.0
  IL_0008:  stloc.1
  IL_0009:  ret
} // end of method Form1::Test2

Assembly code

        string test1 = string.Empty;
0000003a  mov         eax,dword ptr ds:[022A102Ch] 
0000003f  mov         dword ptr [ebp-40h],eax 

        string test11 = test1;
00000042  mov         eax,dword ptr [ebp-40h] 
00000045  mov         dword ptr [ebp-44h],eax 
        string test2 = "";
0000003a  mov         eax,dword ptr ds:[022A202Ch] 
00000040  mov         dword ptr [ebp-40h],eax 

        string test22 = test2;
00000043  mov         eax,dword ptr [ebp-40h] 
00000046  mov         dword ptr [ebp-44h],eax 
link|improve this answer
11  
+1 great explanation. Please format the code though. (I would format it for you, but my rep is too low.) – dss539 Nov 12 '09 at 20:28
Great answer man.Can i know how to see IL & Assembly code?I hope for an answer.Thanks in advance.. – PrateekSaluja Sep 24 '10 at 6:47
1  
This is an outstanding answer. SO needs more like you! – Yuck Jun 29 '11 at 20:13
@Yuck do you know where we can see the IL code for C# code ...... or is there any option in visual studio that will shows this IL code...would you pls tell.... – pratap k Dec 29 '11 at 11:39
4  
@PrateekSaluja: To see the IL you can use ildasm.exe, which ships with Visual Studio. To see diassembly, use the 'Disassembly' window on the debug menu when you hit a breakpoint (works in release code too). – Thomas Bratt Jan 8 at 18:23
show 2 more comments
feedback

I'd prefer string to String. choosing string.Empty over "" is a matter of choosing one and sticking with it. Advantage of using string.Empty is it is very obvious what you mean, and you don't accidentally copy over non-printable characters like "\x003" in your "".

link|improve this answer
32  
I'd argue that if you're accidentally copying non-printable characters into your code, you've got bigger problems than this question ;) – Jon Skeet Nov 4 '08 at 20:10
3  
ASCII \003 happens to be a field delimiter for B2B Messages I've worked with :) – Jimmy Nov 4 '08 at 21:06
4  
(I'd also suggest avoiding the \x escape, btw - it's too hard to spot the difference between "\x9Bad Compiler" and "\x9Good Compiler" which have radically different results!) – Jon Skeet Nov 4 '08 at 21:39
Personally I prefer String over string whenever calling a static method on String. I'm almost blind however and this is a personal preference that I don't enforce on anyone. – Brett Ryan Sep 11 '09 at 4:42
feedback

The best code is no code at all and consequently, less code is better code.

link|improve this answer
2  
Someone apparently doesn't like me … – Konrad Rudolph Jun 24 '09 at 13:29
I like your link. So I gave you an upvote, it was a good read. :) – Dave Aug 31 '10 at 13:08
but in C# we can just say string.IsNullOrWhitespace(s) :p – felickz Jan 19 at 15:04
feedback

I wasn't going to chime in, but I'm seeing some wrong info getting tossed out here.

I, personally, prefer string.Empty. That's a personal preference, and I bend to the will of whatever team I work with on a case-by-case basis.

As some others have mentioned, there is no difference at all between string.Empty and String.Empty.

Additionally, and this is a little known fact, using "" is perfectly acceptable. Every instance of "" will, in other environments, create an object. However, .NET interns its strings, so future instances will pull the same immutable string from the intern pool, and any performance hit will be negligible. Source: Brad Abrams.

link|improve this answer
5  
I don't see why "technically" every instance of "" will create an object. It's not just chance that strings are interned - it's in the C# spec. – Jon Skeet Nov 4 '08 at 20:09
feedback

String.Empty and string.Empty are equivalent. String is the BCL class name. string is the C#...shortcut if you will. Same as with Int32 and int. As far as "", nor really sure. Personally, I always use string.Empty.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I personally prefer "" unless there is a good reason to something more complex.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Just about every developer out there will know what "" means. I personally encountered String.Empty the first time and had to spend some time searching google to figure out if they really are the exact same thing.

link|improve this answer
2  
It is a public readonly string field and its values is ""... why would that change? – Matthew Whited Sep 29 '09 at 20:23
You miss the point that @Jason makes. How do you know what it is the first time you see string.Empty? Did you know what "" was the first time you saw it? – Loadmaster May 21 at 19:45
feedback

I strongly prefer String.Empty, aside from the other reasons to ensure you know what it is and that you have not accidentally removed the contents, but primarily for internationalization. If I see a string in quotes then I always have to wonder whether that is new code and it should be put into a string table. So every time code gets changed/reviewed you need to look for "something in quotes" and yes you can filter out the empty strings but I tell people it is good practice to never put strings in quotes unless you know it won't get localized.

link|improve this answer
feedback

One difference is that if you use a switch-case syntax, you can't write case string.Empty: because it's not a constant. You get a Compilation error : A constant value is expected

Look at this link for more info: http://kossovsky.net/index.php/2009/06/string-empty-versus-empty-quotes/

link|improve this answer
feedback

I use the third, but of the other two the first seems less odd. string is an alias for String, but seeing them across an assignment feels off.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I doesn't make a difference. The last one is the quickest to type though :)

link|improve this answer
feedback

string is synonym for System.String type, They are identical.

Values are also identical: string.Empty == String.Empty == ""

I would not use character constant "" in code, rather string.Empty or String.Empty - easier to see what programmer meant.

Between string and String I like lower case string more just because I used to work with Delphi for lot of years and Delphi style is lowercase string.

So, if I was your boss, you would be writing string.Empty

link|improve this answer
feedback

It doesn't matter - they are exactly the same thing. However, the main thing is that you must be consistent

p.s. I struggle with this sort of "whats the right thing" all the time.

link|improve this answer
1  
In the modern world, "consistent" means consistent across all teams world-wide, which is one of the StackOverflow's goals. If I may suggest, let's use String.Empty. – Pavel Radzivilovsky Dec 21 '09 at 10:32
feedback

Any of the above.

There are many, many better things to pontificate. Such as what colour bark suits a tree best, I think vague brown with tinges of dulcet moss.

link|improve this answer
feedback

The compiler should make them all the same in the long run. Pick a standard so that your code will be easy to read, and stick with it.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Either of the first two would be acceptable to me. I would avoid the last one because it is relatively easy to introduce a bug by putting a space between the quotes. This particular bug would be difficult to find by observation. Assuming no typos, all are semantically equivalent.

[EDIT]

Also, you might want to always use either string or String for consistency, but that's just me.

link|improve this answer
I agree with this remark, but I still live dangerously when I'm lazy. In any event, I don't think I have occasion to write code that uses a string before assigning to it outside of the variable declaration. In fact, it's annoying to me that I have to initialize my strings at all, despite the risks. – EnocNRoll Jan 28 '09 at 16:55
feedback

I think the second is "proper," but to be honest I don't think it will matter. The compiler should be smart enough to compile any of those to the exact same bytecode. I use "" myself.

link|improve this answer
feedback

While difference is very, VERY little, the difference still exist.

1) "" creates object while String.Empty does not. But this object will be created once and will be referenced from the string pool later if you have another "" in the code.

2) String and string are the same, but I would recommend to use String.Empty (as well as String.Format, String.Copy etc.) since dot notation indicates class, not operator, and having class starting with capital letter conforms to C# coding standards.

link|improve this answer
1  
string.Empty is "", check the source – dss539 Nov 12 '09 at 20:17
feedback

It is totally a code-style preference, do to how .NET handles strings. However, here are my opinions :)

I always use the BCL Type names when accessing static methods, properties and fields: String.Empty or Int32.TryParse(...) or Double.Epsilon

I always use the C# keywords when declaring new instances: int i = 0; or string foo = "bar";

I rarely use undeclared string literals as I like to be able to scan the code to combine them into reusable named constants. The compiler replaces constants with the literals anyway so this is more of a way to avoid magic strings/numbers and to give a little more meaning to them with a name. Plus changing the values is easier.

link|improve this answer
feedback

No one mentioned that in VisualStudio String is color coded differently then string. Which is important for readability. Also, lower case is usually used for vars and type, not a big deal but String.Empty is a constant and not a var or type.

link|improve this answer
feedback

On http://blogs.msdn.com/b/brada/archive/2003/04/22/49997.aspx :

As David implies, there difference between String.Empty and "" are pretty small, but there is a difference. "" actually creates an object, it will likely be pulled out of the string intern pool, but still... while String.Empty creates no object... so if you are really looking for ultimately in memory efficiency, I suggest String.Empty. However, you should keep in mind the difference is so trival you will like never see it in your code...
As for System.String.Empty or string.Empty or String.Empty... my care level is low ;-)

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.