Late update: since C# 6.0, the null-propagation operator may be used to express concise like this:
if ( list?.Count > 0 ) // For List<T>
if ( array?.Length > 0 ) // For Array<T>
or, as a cleaner and more generic alternative for IEnumerable<T>
:
if ( enumerable?.Any() ?? false )
Note 1: all upper variants reflect actually IsNotNullOrEmpty
, in contrast to OP question (quote):
Because of operator precedence IsNullOrEmpty
equivalents look less appealing:
if (!(list?.Count > 0))
Note 2: ?? false
is necessary, because of the following reason (summary/quote from this post):
?.
operator will return null
if a child member is null
.
But [...] if we try to get a non-Nullable
member, like the
Any()
method, that returns bool
[...] the compiler will
"wrap" a return value in Nullable<>
. For example, Object?.Any()
will
give us bool?
(which is Nullable<bool>
), not bool
.
[...] Since it can't be implicitly casted to bool
this expression cannot be used in the if
Note 3: as a bonus, the statement is also "thread-safe" (quote from answer of this question):
In a multithreaded context, if [enumerable] is accessible from another
thread (either because it's a field that's accessible or because it's
closed over in a lambda that is exposed to another thread) then the
value could be different each time it's computed [i.e.prior null-check]