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I have some code where I'm returning an array of objects.

Here's a simplified example:

string[] GetTheStuff() {
    List<string> s = null;
    if( somePredicate() ) {
        s = new List<string>(); // imagine we load some data or something
    }
    return (s == null) ? 
        new string[0] :
        s.ToArray();
}

The question is, how expensive is the new string[0] ?
Should I just return null and make the caller accept null as a valid way of indicating "nothing was found"?

NB: This is being called in a loop which gets run hundreds and hundreds of times, so it's one of the few cases where I think this kind of optimiziation is not actually 'premature'.

PS: And even if it was premature, I'd still like to know how it works :-)

Update:

Initially when I asked if it used any space, I was thinking of things from the 'C/C++' point of view, kind of like how in C, writing char a[5]; will allocate 5 bytes of space on the stack, and char b[0]; will allocate 0 bytes.

I realise this is not a good fit for the .NET world, but I was curious if this was something that the compiler or CLR would detect and optimize out, as a non-resizeable array of size zero really shouldn't (as far as I can see?) require any storage space.

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Does an empty array in .NET use any space?

I have some code where I'm returning an array of objects.

Here's a simplified example:

string[] GetTheStuff() {
    List<string> s = null;
    if( somePredicate() ) {
        s = new List<string>(); // imagine we load some data or something
    }
    return (s == null) ? 
        new string[0] :
        s.ToArray();
}

The question is, how expensive is the new string[0] ?
Should I just return null and make the caller accept null as a valid way of indicating "nothing was found"?

NB: This is being called in a loop which gets run hundreds and hundreds of times, so it's one of the few cases where I think this kind of optimiziation is not actually 'premature'.

PS: And even if it was premature, I'd still like to know how it works :-)