47

I frequently have problems dealing with DataRows returned from SqlDataAdapters. When I try to fill in an object using code like this:

DataRow row = ds.Tables[0].Rows[0];
string value = (string)row;

What is the best way to deal with DBNull's in this type of situation.

1

14 Answers 14

37

Nullable types are good, but only for types that are not nullable to begin with.

To make a type "nullable" append a question mark to the type, for example:

int? value = 5;

I would also recommend using the "as" keyword instead of casting. You can only use the "as" keyword on nullable types, so make sure you're casting things that are already nullable (like strings) or you use nullable types as mentioned above. The reasoning for this is

  1. If a type is nullable, the "as" keyword returns null if a value is DBNull.
  2. It's ever-so-slightly faster than casting though only in certain cases. This on its own is never a good enough reason to use as, but coupled with the reason above it's useful.

I'd recommend doing something like this

DataRow row = ds.Tables[0].Rows[0];
string value = row as string;

In the case above, if row comes back as DBNull, then value will become null instead of throwing an exception. Be aware that if your DB query changes the columns/types being returned, using as will cause your code to silently fail and make values simple null instead of throwing the appropriate exception when incorrect data is returned so it is recommended that you have tests in place to validate your queries in other ways to ensure data integrity as your codebase evolves.

1
  • It's very old post, however, It is worth noticing that "as" keyword can be used for casting only for reference and nullable types and not with value types.
    – Mantra
    Jun 2, 2020 at 12:56
21

If you aren't using nullable types, the best thing to do is check to see if the column's value is DBNull. If it is DBNull, then set your reference to what you use for null/empty for the corresponding datatype.

DataRow row = ds.Tables[0].Rows[0];
string value;

if (row["fooColumn"] == DBNull.Value)
{
   value = string.Empty;
}
else 
{
   value = Convert.ToString(row["fooColumn"]);
}

As Manu said, you can create a convert class with an overloaded convert method per type so you don't have to pepper your code with if/else blocks.

I will however stress that nullable types is the better route to go if you can use them. The reasoning is that with non-nullable types, you are going to have to resort to "magic numbers" to represent null. For example, if you are mapping a column to an int variable, how are you going to represent DBNull? Often you can't use 0 because 0 has a valid meaning in most programs. Often I see people map DBNull to int.MinValue, but that could potentially be problematic too. My best advice is this:

  • For columns that can be null in the database, use nullable types.
  • For columns that cannot be null in the database, use regular types.

Nullable types were made to solve this problem. That being said, if you are on an older version of the framework or work for someone who doesn't grok nullable types, the code example will do the trick.

3
  • The line if(row["fooColumn"] == DBNull.Value) works, but isn't correct. It isn't defined DBNull.Value should be implemented as a Singleton pattern. A better line would be: if(row["fooColumn"] is DBNull)
    – doekman
    Jun 12, 2009 at 8:30
  • @doekman - Actually, DBNull is a singleton class. To quote MSDN: "DBNull is a singleton class, which means only this [DBNull.Value] instance of this class can exist." msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.dbnull.value.aspx
    – Greg
    Dec 22, 2009 at 16:39
  • 2
    If you want treat dbnull as empty string row["fooColumn"].ToString() will do it.
    – samir105
    Dec 23, 2012 at 8:27
9

Add a reference to System.Data.DataSetExtensions, that adds Linq support for querying data tables.

This would be something like:

string value = (
    from row in ds.Tables[0].Rows
    select row.Field<string>(0) ).FirstOrDefault();
1
  • 2
    +1: this answer should be more upvoted and probably also accepted - definitely row.Field<T>("column_name") is the most efficient, readable and clean solution for dealing with null (DBNull.Value). There is also row.SetField<T>("column_name", value) for writing value to row. Dec 19, 2012 at 23:20
8

I always found it clear, concise, and problem free using a version of the If/Else check, only with the ternary operator. Keeps everything on one row, including assigning a default value if the column is null.

So, assuming a nullable Int32 column named "MyCol", where we want to return -99 if the column is null, but return the integer value if the column is not null:

return row["MyCol"] == DBNull.Value ? -99 : Convert.ToInt32(Row["MyCol"]);

It is the same method as the If/Else winner above - But I've found if you're reading multiple columns in from a datareader, it's a real bonus having all the column-read lines one under another, lined up, as it's easier to spot errors:

Object.ID = DataReader["ID"] == DBNull.Value ? -99 : Convert.ToInt32(DataReader["ID"]);
Object.Name = DataReader["Name"] == DBNull.Value ? "None" : Convert.ToString(DataReader["Name"]);
Object.Price = DataReader["Price"] == DBNull.Value ? 0.0 : Convert.ToFloat(DataReader["Price"]);
5

If you have control of the query that is returning the results, you can use ISNULL() to return non-null values like this:

SELECT 
  ISNULL(name,'') AS name
  ,ISNULL(age, 0) AS age
FROM 
  names

If your situation can tolerate these magic values to substitute for NULL, taking this approach can fix the issue through your entire app without cluttering your code.

4

Often when working with DataTables you have to deal with this cases, where the row field can be either null or DBNull, normally I deal with that like this:

string myValue = (myDataTable.Rows[i]["MyDbNullableField"] as string) ?? string.Empty;

The 'as' operator returns null for invalid cast's, like DBNull to string, and the '??' returns the term to the right of the expression if the first is null.

3

DBNull implements .ToString() like everything else. No need to do anything. Instead of the hard cast, call the object's .ToString() method.

DataRow row = ds.Tables[0].Rows[0];
string value;

if (row["fooColumn"] == DBNull.Value)
{
   value = string.Empty;
}
else 
{
   value = Convert.ToString(row["fooColumn"]);
}

this becomes:

DataRow row = ds.Tables[0].Rows[0];
string value = row.ToString()

DBNull.ToString() returns string.Empty

I would imagine this is the best practice you're looking for

2
  • This doesn't work if the value isn't a string though. I was looking for a general case answer.
    – Mykroft
    Mar 24, 2009 at 17:04
  • I agree yeah it's good if it's strings keeps it simple but other types wouldn't work e.g. tryng to do bool.Parse(row["fooColumn"].ToString()).
    – PeteT
    Jul 15, 2009 at 14:49
3

It is worth mentioning, that DBNull.Value.ToString() equals String.Empty

You can use this to your advantage:

DataRow row = ds.Tables[0].Rows[0];
string value = row["name"].ToString();

However, that only works for Strings, for everything else I would use the linq way or a extension method. For myself, I have written a little extension method that checks for DBNull and even does the casting via Convert.ChangeType(...)

int value = row.GetValueOrDefault<int>("count");
int value = row.GetValueOrDefault<int>("count", 15);
1

You can also test with Convert.IsDBNull (MSDN).

1

I usually write my own ConvertDBNull class that wraps the built-in Convert class. If the value is DBNull it will return null if its a reference type or the default value if its a value type. Example: - ConvertDBNull.ToInt64(object obj) returns Convert.ToInt64(obj) unless obj is DBNull in which case it will return 0.

1

For some reason I've had problems with doing a check against DBNull.Value, so I've done things slightly different and leveraged a property within the DataRow object:

if (row.IsNull["fooColumn"])
{
   value = string.Empty();
}
{
else
{
   value = row["fooColumn"].ToString;
}
1

Brad Abrams posted something related just a couple of days ago http://blogs.msdn.com/brada/archive/2009/02/09/framework-design-guidelines-system-dbnull.aspx

In Summary "AVOID using System.DBNull. Prefer Nullable instead."

And here is my two cents (of untested code :) )

// Or if (row["fooColumn"] == DBNull.Value)
if (row.IsNull["fooColumn"])
{
   // use a null for strings and a Nullable for value types 
   // if it is a value type and null is invalid throw a 
   // InvalidOperationException here with some descriptive text. 
   // or dont check for null at all and let the cast exception below bubble  
   value = null;
}
else
{
   // do a direct cast here. dont use "as", "convert", "parse" or "tostring"
   // as all of these will swallow the case where is the incorect type.
   // (Unless it is a string in the DB and really do want to convert it)
   value = (string)row["fooColumn"];
}

And one question... Any reason you are not using an ORM?

2
  • We are using ORM now. At the time we weren't
    – Mykroft
    Feb 10, 2009 at 21:37
  • Any reason you are not using an ORM? I use raw ADO .NET for performance. Try to merge 1 million records with EF or NH. Sep 22, 2013 at 10:58
1

You should also look at the extension methods. Here are some examples to deal with this scenerio.

Recommended read

0

If you are concerned with getting DBNull when expecting strings, one option is to convert all the DBNull values in the DataTable into empty string.

It is quite simple to do it but it would add some overhead especially if you are dealing with large DataTables. Check this link that shows how to do it if you are interested

1
  • Someties it is important to know the difference between a Null and an empty string though. For example setting a value to an empty string as opposed to a value just never being set.
    – Mykroft
    Oct 24, 2008 at 17:44

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