1

I must be missing something here, but I seem to have a List whose items are getting caught as null, even after I've checked and confirmed they were not.

My unit tests for my ASP.NET MVC project were throwing a NullReferenceException on a foreach loop, but I couldn't find any reason for it, so I threw a handful of checks into my code. To my surprise, the check statements don't catch any null values, but the exception persists. Here's the relevant code:

[HttpPost]
[ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
public PartialViewResult CreateSimilar(int rebateId, List<AddressInput> addresses, bool recdResults = false)
{
    List<RebateHeader> newRebates = new List<RebateHeader>();
    RebateHeader entity = null;

    int newId = -1;

    if (!recdResults)
    {
        var repo = _db as HeaderRepository;
        List<PotentialDuplicate> allDups = new List<PotentialDuplicate>();

        //A few checks for null objects to illustrate my point-------
        if (addresses == null)
            throw new ApplicationException("Addresses was null"); //Not thrown
        else
            System.Console.WriteLine("Addresses was not null"); //This line is hit

        foreach (AddressInput address in addresses)
        {
            if (address == null)
                throw new ApplicationException("Address was null"); //Not thrown
            else
                System.Console.WriteLine("Address was not null"); //This line is hit
        }

        var test = addresses[0];
        System.Console.WriteLine(test.City); //This line returns a value
        System.Console.WriteLine(test.State); //This line returns a value
        //End checks---------------------------------------------------

        foreach (AddressInput address in addresses) //NullReferenceException THROWN HERE
        {
            List<PotentialDuplicate> dups = repo.GetDuplicateAddresses(
                address.Address, address.City, address.State).ToList();
            if (dups.Count > 0)
            {
                allDups.AddRange(dups);
            }
        }

        if (allDups.Count > 0)
        {
            return PartialView("_AddressDialogPotentialDup", allDups);
        }
    }
    . . . //Additional code truncated
    return PartialView("_IndexNoPager", model);
}

I must be missing something here, but I'm not seeing it. Any ideas?

For further reference, here's the unit test that's failing:

[Test]
public void CreateSimilar_Adds_1_New_Record()
{
    EntryController controller = new EntryController(repository);
    List<AddressInput> addresses = new List<AddressInput> 
    {   
        new AddressInput 
    { 
        Address = "Duplicate St.", City = "Testville", State = "MN", 
        ClosingDate = null, Quarter = "115" 
    }
    };

    controller.CreateSimilar(1, addresses); //Unit test FAILS HERE

    Assert.AreEqual(4, repository.GetAll().Count());
    Assert.AreEqual(1, repository.Added.Count);
    Assert.AreEqual("Test Duplicate 1", repository.Added[0].Address);
}

UPDATE: In response to a comment below, here's my code for GetDuplicateAddresses:

public IEnumerable<PotentialDuplicate> GetDuplicateAddresses(
    string address, string city, string state)
{
    var result = new List<PotentialDuplicate>();

    using (SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("dbo.GetDuplicateAddresses", (SqlConnection)this.Database.Connection))
    {
        cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
        cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Address", address);
        cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@City", city);
        cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@State", state);

        cmd.Connection.Open();
        using (var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader(CommandBehavior.CloseConnection))
        {
            while (reader.Read())
            {
                result.Add(new PotentialDuplicate
                {
                    OrigAddress = address,
                    RebateIdMatch = reader.GetInt32(0),
                    Address = reader.GetString(1),
                    MatchType = reader.GetString(2)
                });
            }

            return result;
        }
    }
}

And here's the stub I'm using in my unit test:

public IEnumerable<PotentialDuplicate> GetDuplicateAddresses(
    string address, string city, string state)
{
    var result = new List<PotentialDuplicate>();
    return result;
}
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  • Where does the unit test fails and why? Feb 7, 2015 at 2:45
  • I've edited my code block to make this more clear. It fails on the call to the controller, because it gets kicked out by the NullReferenceException that's thrown at the beginning of the foreach loop. Feb 7, 2015 at 2:47
  • On which For..In loop? Feb 7, 2015 at 2:48
  • Sorry, meant foreach. It happens at foreach (AddressInput address in addresses), the second time. The first is just one I added as a check, expecting it to catch a null value there. Feb 7, 2015 at 2:49
  • 1
    Probably the GetDuplicateAddresses method is returning NULL, and then the .ToList() fails. Feb 7, 2015 at 3:09

2 Answers 2

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I would check to see if "dups" is null before doing the dups.Count() > 0

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  • The exception is raised at the beginning of the foreach (AddressInput address in addresses) loop. Would a null inside the loop cause the exception to be raised there? I wouldn't think so, but I could certainly be wrong, as I'm no c# expert. Feb 7, 2015 at 2:49
  • dups cannot be null. IEnumerable.ToList() will never return null Feb 7, 2015 at 2:50
  • It has happened to me before. Feb 7, 2015 at 2:51
  • Can you show us the repo.GetDuplicateAddresses() code please? The error could be in that method. Feb 7, 2015 at 2:55
  • Well, it turned out I hadn't implemented it in my unit tests! I'm implementing it now, but it doesn't seem to be fixing the problem. I'll add the code above. Feb 7, 2015 at 3:08
0

As it turns out, the problem was with this cast:

var repo = _db as HeaderRepository;

I had to refactor some of my other code, and I changed this line slightly to raise an InvalidCastException if there's a similar issue in the future:

var repo = (IHeaderRepository)_db;

I hadn't even thought to check this, because the compiler was highlighting the foreach loop as the location of the exception. Thanks to Tim Southard and thepirat000 for pointing out that the code block inside the loop could cause the compiler to raise the exception.

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