vote up 6 vote down star
4

I know the standard way of using the Null coalescing operator in C# is to set default values.

string nobody = null;
string somebody = "Bob Saget";
string anybody = "";

anybody = nobody   ?? "Mr. T"; // returns Mr. T
anybody = somebody ?? "Mr. T"; // returns "Bob Saget"

But what else can ?? be used for? It doesn't seem as useful as the ternary operator, apart from being more concise and easier to read than:

nobody = null;
anybody = nobody == null ? "Bob Saget" : nobody; // returns Bob Saget

So given that fewer even know about null coalescing operator...

Have you used ?? for something else?

Is ?? necessary, or should you just use the ternary operator (that most are familiar with)

flag

8 Answers

vote up 16 vote down check

Well, first of all, it's much easier to chain than the standard ternary:

string anybody = parm1 ?? localDefault ?? globalDefault;

vs.

string anyboby = (parm1 != null) ? parm1 
               : ((localDefault != null) ? localDefault 
               : globalDefault);

It also works well if null-possible object isn't a variable:

string anybody = Parameters["Name"] 
              ?? Settings["Name"] 
              ?? GlobalSetting["Name"];

vs.

string anybody = (Parameters["Name"] != null ? Parameters["Name"] 
                 : (Settings["Name"] != null) ? Settings["Name"]
                 :  GlobalSetting["Name"];
link|flag
The chaining is a big plus for the operator, removes a bunch of redundant IFs – chakrit Nov 10 '08 at 18:43
vote up 24 vote down

I've used it as a lazy load one-liner:

public MyClass LazyProp
{
    get { return lazyField ?? (lazyField = new MyClass()); }
}

Readable? Decide for yourself.

link|flag
1  
Hmmm, you found a counterexample to "why would someone want to use it as an obfuscated IF"... that is actually very readable to me. – Godeke Nov 10 '08 at 18:29
vote up 5 vote down

I've found it useful in two "slightly odd" ways:

  • As an alternative for having an out parameter when writing TryParse routines (i.e. return the null value if parsing fails)
  • As a "don't know" representation for comparisons

The latter needs a little bit more information. Typically when you create a comparison with multiple elements, you need to see whether the first part of the comparison (e.g. age) gives a definitive answer, then the next part (e.g. name) only if the first part didn't help. Using the null coalescing operator means you can write pretty simple comparisons (whether for ordering or equality). For example, using a couple of helper classes in MiscUtil:

public int Compare(Person p1, Person p2)
{
    return PartialComparer.Compare(p1.Age, p2.Age)
        ?? PartialComparer.Compare(p1.Name, p2.Name)
        ?? PartialComparer.Compare(p1.Salary, p2.Salary)
        ?? 0;
}

Admittedly I now have ProjectionComparer in MiscUtil, along with some extensions, which make this kind of thing even easier - but it's still neat.

The same can be done for checking for reference equality (or nullity) at the start of implementing Equals.

link|flag
I like that. very innovative. – Atomiton Nov 11 '08 at 9:26
I like what you did with the PartialComparer, but was looking for cases where I need to keep the evaluated expression variables. I am not versed in lambdas and extensions, so could you see if the following adheres to a similar pattern (i.e. does it work)? stackoverflow.com/questions/1234263/… – mpbloch Aug 10 at 20:01
vote up 3 vote down

I've used ?? in my implementation of IDataErrorInfo:

public string Error
{
    get
    {
        return this["Name"] ?? this["Address"] ?? this["Phone"];
    }
}

public string this[string columnName]
{
    get { ... }
}

If any individual property is in an "error" state I get that error, otherwise I get null. Works really well.

link|flag
Interesting. You're using "this" as a property. I've never done that. – Atomiton Nov 12 '08 at 8:41
Yeah, it's part of how IDataErrorInfo works. Generally that syntax is only useful on collection classes. – Matt Hamilton Nov 12 '08 at 19:42
vote up 1 vote down

Cool! Count me as someone who didn't know about the null coalescing operator -- that's pretty nifty stuff.

I find it much easier to read than the ternary operator.

The first place that comes to mind where I might use it is to keep all of my default parameters in a single place.

public void someMethod( object parm2, ArrayList parm3 )
{ 
  someMethod( null, parm2, parm3 );
}
public void someMethod( string parm1, ArrayList parm3 )
{
  someMethod( parm1, null, parm3 );
}
public void someMethod( string parm1, object parm2, )
{
  someMethod( parm1, parm2, null );
}
public void someMethod( string parm1 )
{
  someMethod( parm1, null, null );
}
public void someMethod( object parm2 )
{
  someMethod( null, parm2, null );
}
public void someMethod( ArrayList parm3 )
{
  someMethod( null, null, parm3 );
}
public void someMethod( string parm1, object parm2, ArrayList parm3 )
{
  // Set your default parameters here rather than scattered through the above function overloads
  parm1 = parm1 ?? "Default User Name";
  parm2 = parm2 ?? GetCurrentUserObj();
  parm3 = parm3 ?? DefaultCustomerList;

  // Do the rest of the stuff here
}
link|flag
You might as well learn about "constructor chaining".. – chakrit Nov 10 '08 at 18:42
vote up 1 vote down

Another advantage is that the ternary operator requires a double evaluation or a temporary variable.

Consider this, for instance:

string result = MyMethod() ?? "default value";

while with the ternary operator you are left with either:

string result = (MyMethod () != null ? MyMethod () : "default value");

which calls MyMethod twice, or:

string methodResult = MyMethod ();
string result = (methodResult != null ? methodResult : "default value");

Either way, the null coalescing operator is cleaner and, I guess, more efficient.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Is ?? necessary, or should you just use the ternary operator (that most are familiar with)

You should use what best expresses your intent. Since there is a null coalesce operator, use it.

On the other hand, since it's so specialized, I don't think it has other uses. I would have preferred an appropriate overload of the || operator, as other languages do. This would be more parsimonious in the language design. But well …

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Only problem is the null-coalesce operator doesn't detect empty strings.


i.e.

string result1 = string.empty ?? "dead code!";

string result2 = null ?? "coalesced!";

OUTPUT:

result1 = ""

result2 = coalesced!


I'm currently looking into overriding the ?? operator to work around this. It sure would be handy to have this built into the Framework.

Thoughts?

link|flag
You can do this with Extension methods, but I agree, it would be a nice addition to the code and very useful in a web context. – Atomiton Mar 10 at 18:30
Yeah, this is a frequent scenario... there is even a special method String.IsNullOrEmpty(string)... – Yacoder Jun 17 at 19:58

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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