In the case where reference type is coalesced with null, why isn't this a compiler warning in the C# compiler? Is there any case where this makes sense?
obj2 = obj ?? null;
You should read my essay on the subject.
Briefly: in order for a compiler warning to exist it has to be:
Your proposed warning does not meet requirements 1 and 4. You are, to my knowledge, the first person to think of this, and therefore it cannot be a warning because no one on the compiler team thought of it. And it is not likely to be typed by accident, so why should it be a warning? Warnings are there to tell you when you mistyped something that is likely to be mistyped. It also fails requirement 3, since the code is not obviously wrong, it's just needlessly complicated. The compiler does not give warnings for x * 1
where x
is an integer either.
It makes sense, it just isn't very useful.
Neither is:
i = i + 0;
But the compiler doesn't complain about that either. Why should it? The compiler does what it is told, as long as your request is syntactically correct - which it is.
i
is an int
. (The IL for i = i;
appears identical as i = i + 0
) It's definitely smart enough not to optimize it out if i
is a custom type with an implicit +
operator overload for int.
EDIT: It appears to keep the addition in if i
is a float
or double
(but not decimal
)
Jun 21, 2013 at 20:42
Your example doesn't exactly make sense but something like this does;
d = a ?? b ?? c ?? null;
Here, I'm saying taking the first non null value of the three, if they're all null then just take null.
You can write a lot of things that does not make sence, compiler does not have to point each one of them as a warning.
we try to reserve warnings for only those situations where we can say with almost certainty that the code is broken, misleading or useless
So warnings are used for code which, while being syntactically correct, can lead to real problems.
Although the statement is not very useful, why would it warn you?
If obj
is not null, obj2
is assigned to obj
. Else obj2
is assigned to null
. This is perfectly legal.