z contains NULL. Why doesn't the output window show the NULL? Is it because NULL is not a value?
int? x = null;
int? y = 1;
int? z = 0;
z = x + y;
Debug.WriteLine(z);
When you look into the reference source of Console.WriteLine(Object)
, you can see that .NET calls System.IO.TextWriter.WriteLine(Object)
which does explicitly check for null
and will then output a blank line:
public virtual void WriteLine(Object value) {
if (value==null) {
WriteLine();
}
else {
// Call WriteLine(value.ToString), not Write(Object), WriteLine().
// This makes calls to WriteLine(Object) atomic.
IFormattable f = value as IFormattable;
if (f != null)
WriteLine(f.ToString(null, FormatProvider));
else
WriteLine(value.ToString());
}
}
Debug.WriteLine(Object)
behaves the same way but is a bit more complicated. It eventually calls System.Diagnostics.TraceListener.WriteLine(Object)
.
int?.ToString()
.
May 1, 2018 at 20:08
String a = null;Debug.WriteLine(a);
. Beware the virtual
.
May 1, 2018 at 20:17
Debug.WriteLine((object)z ?? "null");