372

I'm using a SQLdatareader to build POCOs from a database. The code works except when it encounters a null value in the database. For example, if the FirstName column in the database contains a null value, an exception is thrown.

employee.FirstName = sqlreader.GetString(indexFirstName);

How can I handle null values in this situation?

1
  • 2
    I think the Generic function created by @Vijai should get more recognition in this thread. It worked really well for me and I don't need to pass the data reader object each time. many popular answers passing data reader object which is unnecessary and heavy.
    – MSBI-Geek
    Aug 17, 2021 at 13:04

30 Answers 30

591

You need to check for IsDBNull:

if(!SqlReader.IsDBNull(indexFirstName))
{
  employee.FirstName = sqlreader.GetString(indexFirstName);
}

That's your only reliable way to detect and handle this situation.

I wrapped those things into extension methods and tend to return a default value if the column is indeed null:

public static string SafeGetString(this SqlDataReader reader, int colIndex)
{
   if(!reader.IsDBNull(colIndex))
       return reader.GetString(colIndex);
   return string.Empty;
}

Now you can call it like this:

employee.FirstName = SqlReader.SafeGetString(indexFirstName);

and you'll never have to worry about an exception or a null value again.

2
  • 86
    If someone needs the column name rather than the index, you can do: int colIndex = reader.GetOrdinal(fieldname); and easily overload @marc_s's SafeGetString function.
    – ilans
    Feb 15, 2015 at 13:04
  • Also can be done like this: int ordinal = reader.GetOrdinal("col_name"); uint? val = reader.IsDBNull(ordinal) ? (uint?)null : reader.GetUInt32(ordinal);
    – ed22
    Mar 30, 2019 at 6:32
245

You should use the as operator combined with the ?? operator for default values. Value types will need to be read as nullable and given a default.

employee.FirstName = sqlreader[indexFirstName] as string;
employee.Age = sqlreader[indexAge] as int? ?? default(int);

The as operator handles the casting including the check for DBNull.

6
  • 6
    If someone changes the Age column from being an int to an SQL bigint (c# long), your code will fail silently by returning 0. The answer from ZXX is more reliable IMO. Oct 15, 2011 at 19:27
  • I wonder if you can override the default(int) to be -1 instead of 0
    – Chris
    May 16, 2013 at 15:50
  • 6
    @Chris - You should be able to just replace default(int) with -1. May 17, 2013 at 8:06
  • @Stevo3000 You are correct! I tried that and it worked as you said right after I posted, but I forgot to come back to this page :)
    – Chris
    May 17, 2013 at 14:52
  • 5
    Be aware that using "as" here can hide index errors. If you accidentally use sqlreader[indexAge] as string ?? "", you'll always get "". Consider whether you really want (int?)sqlreader[indexAge] ?? defaultValue instead, so if your SQL changes you get exceptions instead of bad values. @Stevo3000: default(int) is 0, not -1. @Chris: Make sure you're using the one you really want.
    – me22
    Oct 4, 2013 at 21:28
37
employee.FirstName = sqlreader[indexFirstName] as string;

For integers, if you cast to a nullable int, you can use GetValueOrDefault()

employee.Age = (sqlreader[indexAge] as int?).GetValueOrDefault();

or the null-coalescing operator (??).

employee.Age = (sqlreader[indexAge] as int?) ?? 0;
0
28

IsDbNull(int) is usually much slower than using methods like GetSqlDateTime and then comparing to DBNull.Value. Try these extension methods for SqlDataReader.

public static T Def<T>(this SqlDataReader r, int ord)
{
    var t = r.GetSqlValue(ord);
    if (t == DBNull.Value) return default(T);
    return ((INullable)t).IsNull ? default(T) : (T)t;
}

public static T? Val<T>(this SqlDataReader r, int ord) where T:struct
{
    var t = r.GetSqlValue(ord);
    if (t == DBNull.Value) return null;
    return ((INullable)t).IsNull ? (T?)null : (T)t;
}

public static T Ref<T>(this SqlDataReader r, int ord) where T : class
{
    var t = r.GetSqlValue(ord);
    if (t == DBNull.Value) return null;
    return ((INullable)t).IsNull ? null : (T)t;
}

Use them like this:

var dd = r.Val<DateTime>(ords[4]);
var ii = r.Def<int>(ords[0]);
int nn = r.Def<int>(ords[0]);
2
  • 5
    I'm finding that the explicit operators on the System.Data.SqlTypes types are throwing errors everywhere trying to use this code... Nov 19, 2014 at 2:52
  • See stackoverflow.com/a/21024873/1508467 for an explanation of why this sometimes fails (try using Val<int> to read a SQL int column).
    – Rhys Jones
    May 29, 2019 at 15:20
24

if(reader.IsDBNull(ColumnIndex)) {// logic} works as many answers says.

And I want to mention if you working with column names, just comparing types may be more comfortable.

if(reader["TeacherImage"].GetType() == typeof(DBNull)) { //logic }
2
  • This also works on old versions of System.Data and .NET FW
    – RaSor
    Dec 7, 2017 at 7:50
  • Only this worked for me may be due to old .NET FW
    – Rush.2707
    Apr 11, 2023 at 7:04
16

I don't think there's a NULL column value, when rows are returned within a datareader using the column name.

If you do datareader["columnName"].ToString(); it will always give you a value that can be a empty string (String.Empty if you need to compare).

I would use the following and wouldn't worry too much:

employee.FirstName = sqlreader["columnNameForFirstName"].ToString();
1
  • 5
    You can do a reader[FieldName] == DBNull.Value, to check for NULL's Jan 8, 2013 at 16:37
15

You can write a Generic function to check Null and include default value when it is NULL. Call this when reading Datareader

public T CheckNull<T>(object obj)
        {
            return (obj == DBNull.Value ? default(T) : (T)obj);
        }

When reading the Datareader use

                        while (dr.Read())
                        {
                            tblBPN_InTrRecon Bpn = new tblBPN_InTrRecon();
                            Bpn.BPN_Date = CheckNull<DateTime?>(dr["BPN_Date"]);
                            Bpn.Cust_Backorder_Qty = CheckNull<int?>(dr["Cust_Backorder_Qty"]);
                            Bpn.Cust_Min = CheckNull<int?>(dr["Cust_Min"]);
                         }
1
  • I think this is the best common method to handle any kind of null. I don't know why this answer is not popular.
    – MSBI-Geek
    Aug 17, 2021 at 12:59
13

One way to do it is to check for db nulls:

employee.FirstName = (sqlreader.IsDBNull(indexFirstName) 
    ? ""
    : sqlreader.GetString(indexFirstName));
0
12

This Solution is less vendor-dependent and works with an SQL, OleDB, and MySQL Reader:

public static string GetStringSafe(this IDataReader reader, int colIndex)
{
    return GetStringSafe(reader, colIndex, string.Empty);
}

public static string GetStringSafe(this IDataReader reader, int colIndex, string defaultValue)
{
    if (!reader.IsDBNull(colIndex))
        return reader.GetString(colIndex);
    else
        return defaultValue;
}

public static string GetStringSafe(this IDataReader reader, string indexName)
{
    return GetStringSafe(reader, reader.GetOrdinal(indexName));
}

public static string GetStringSafe(this IDataReader reader, string indexName, string defaultValue)
{
    return GetStringSafe(reader, reader.GetOrdinal(indexName), defaultValue);
}
1
  • 1
    Copying and customizing this code directly into an extensions class right now.
    – qxotk
    Jul 28, 2016 at 16:48
11

By influencing from getpsyched's answer, I created a generic method which checks column value by its name

public static T SafeGet<T>(this System.Data.SqlClient.SqlDataReader reader, string nameOfColumn)
{
  var indexOfColumn = reader.GetOrdinal(nameOfColumn);
  return reader.IsDBNull(indexOfColumn) ? default(T) : reader.GetFieldValue<T>(indexOfColumn);
}

Usage:

var myVariable = SafeGet<string>(reader, "NameOfColumn")
1
  • 2
    I don't know who you are, but bless you. This function saved over three hours of work. Jun 17, 2020 at 2:00
8

What I tend to do is replace the null values in the SELECT statement with something appropriate.

SELECT ISNULL(firstname, '') FROM people

Here I replace every null with a blank string. Your code won't throw in error in that case.

3
  • If possible, use this avoid nulls. Otherwise, I like Sonny Boy's answer of helper methods. Nov 20, 2009 at 17:30
  • 3
    Why a static, separate helper method? Doesn't an extension method on the SqlDataReader seem more compelling and more intuitive??
    – marc_s
    Nov 20, 2009 at 17:33
  • The answer should tell about the C# way of handling it , not using SQL. In my case, I don't have control over SQL query. Nov 18, 2021 at 13:47
6

Check sqlreader.IsDBNull(indexFirstName) before you try to read it.

6

As an addition to the answer by marc_s, you can use a more generic extension method to get values from the SqlDataReader:

public static T SafeGet<T>(this SqlDataReader reader, int col)
    {
        return reader.IsDBNull(col) ? default(T) : reader.GetFieldValue<T>(col);
    }
3
  • I would not call this method "SafeGet" because if T is a struct it will convert nulls to the non-null default for T - not really safe. Perhaps "GetValueOrDefault".
    – Rhys Jones
    Jun 1, 2019 at 9:23
  • 1
    @RhysJones Why would you have T as a struct in this case? Even if you do I would argue that the non-null default in the struct is the expected behavior.
    – getpsyched
    Jun 3, 2019 at 13:45
  • @RhysJones But I agree that this method might not be safe, it would need to handle exceptions like InvalidCastException from the SqlDataReader.
    – getpsyched
    Jun 3, 2019 at 13:46
4

how to about creating helper methods

For String

private static string MyStringConverter(object o)
    {
        if (o == DBNull.Value || o == null)
            return "";

        return o.ToString();
    }

Usage

MyStringConverter(read["indexStringValue"])

For Int

 private static int MyIntonverter(object o)
    {
        if (o == DBNull.Value || o == null)
            return 0;

        return Convert.ToInt32(o);
    }

Usage

MyIntonverter(read["indexIntValue"])

For Date

private static DateTime? MyDateConverter(object o)
    {
        return (o == DBNull.Value || o == null) ? (DateTime?)null : Convert.ToDateTime(o);
    }

Usage

MyDateConverter(read["indexDateValue"])

Note: for DateTime declare varialbe as

DateTime? variable;
4

None of these was quite what i wanted:

 public static T GetFieldValueOrDefault<T>(this SqlDataReader reader, string name)
 {
     int index = reader.GetOrdinal(name);
     T value = reader.IsDBNull(index) ? default(T) : reader.GetFieldValue<T>(index);
     return value;
 }
3

I think you would want to use:

SqlReader.IsDBNull(indexFirstName)
2

We use a series of static methods to pull all of the values out of our data readers. So in this case we'd be calling DBUtils.GetString(sqlreader(indexFirstName)) The benefit of creating static/shared methods is that you don't have to do the same checks over and over and over...

The static method(s) would contain code to check for nulls (see other answers on this page).

2

You may use the conditional operator:

employee.FirstName = sqlreader["indexFirstName"] != DBNull.Value ? sqlreader[indexFirstName].ToString() : "";
1
  • Same as one of the answers below, but 8 years behind!
    – beercohol
    Aug 22, 2017 at 12:28
2

Here is helper class which others can use if they need based on @marc_s answer:

public static class SQLDataReaderExtensions
    {
        public static int SafeGetInt(this SqlDataReader dataReader, string fieldName)
        {
            int fieldIndex = dataReader.GetOrdinal(fieldName);
            return dataReader.IsDBNull(fieldIndex) ? 0 : dataReader.GetInt32(fieldIndex);
        }

        public static int? SafeGetNullableInt(this SqlDataReader dataReader, string fieldName)
        {
            int fieldIndex = dataReader.GetOrdinal(fieldName);
            return dataReader.GetValue(fieldIndex) as int?;
        }

        public static string SafeGetString(this SqlDataReader dataReader, string fieldName)
        {
            int fieldIndex = dataReader.GetOrdinal(fieldName);
            return dataReader.IsDBNull(fieldIndex) ? string.Empty : dataReader.GetString(fieldIndex);
        }

        public static DateTime? SafeGetNullableDateTime(this SqlDataReader dataReader, string fieldName)
        {
            int fieldIndex = dataReader.GetOrdinal(fieldName);
            return dataReader.GetValue(fieldIndex) as DateTime?;
        }

        public static bool SafeGetBoolean(this SqlDataReader dataReader, string fieldName)
        {
            return SafeGetBoolean(dataReader, fieldName, false);
        }

        public static bool SafeGetBoolean(this SqlDataReader dataReader, string fieldName, bool defaultValue)
        {
            int fieldIndex = dataReader.GetOrdinal(fieldName);
            return dataReader.IsDBNull(fieldIndex) ? defaultValue : dataReader.GetBoolean(fieldIndex);
        }
    }
2

There are a lot of answers here with useful info (and some wrong info) spread about, I'd like to bring it all together.

The short answer to the question is to check for DBNull - almost everyone agrees on this bit :)

Rather than using a helper method to read nullable values per SQL data type a generic method allows us to address this with a lot less code. However, you can't have a single generic method for both nullable value types and reference types, this is discussed at length in Nullable type as a generic parameter possible? and C# generic type constraint for everything nullable.

So, following on from the answers from @ZXX and @getpsyched we end up with this, 2 methods for getting nullable values and I've added a 3rd for non-null values (it completes the set based on method naming).

public static T? GetNullableValueType<T>(this SqlDataReader sqlDataReader, string columnName) where T : struct
{
    int columnOrdinal = sqlDataReader.GetOrdinal(columnName);
    return sqlDataReader.IsDBNull(columnOrdinal) ? (T?)null : sqlDataReader.GetFieldValue<T>(columnOrdinal);
}

public static T GetNullableReferenceType<T>(this SqlDataReader sqlDataReader, string columnName) where T : class
{
    int columnOrdinal = sqlDataReader.GetOrdinal(columnName);
    return sqlDataReader.IsDBNull(columnOrdinal) ? null : sqlDataReader.GetFieldValue<T>(columnOrdinal);
}

public static T GetNonNullValue<T>(this SqlDataReader sqlDataReader, string columnName)
{
    int columnOrdinal = sqlDataReader.GetOrdinal(columnName);
    return sqlDataReader.GetFieldValue<T>(columnOrdinal);
}

I usually use column names, alter these if you use column indexes. Based on these method names I can tell whether I'm expecting the data to be nullable or not, quite useful when looking at code written a long time ago.

Tips;

  • Not having nullable columns in the database avoids this issue. If you have control over the database then columns should be non-null by default and only nullable where necessary.
  • Don't cast database values with the C# 'as' operator because if the cast is wrong it will silently return null.
  • Using a default value expression will change database nulls to non-null values for value types like int, datetime, bit etc.

Lastly, whilst testing the above methods across all SQL Server data types I discovered you can't directly get a char[] from a SqlDataReader, if you want a char[] you will have to get a string and use ToCharArray().

2

in c# 7.0 we can do :

var a = reader["ERateCode"] as string;
var b = reader["ERateLift"] as int?;
var c = reader["Id"] as int?;

so it will keep null value if it is.

2

I did my best to reimplement the Field method from DataTable. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.data.datarowextensions.field

It will throw if you try to convert a DBNull.Value to a non-nullable type. Otherwise it will convert DBNull.Value to null.

I haven't fully tested it.

public static T Field<T>(this SqlDataReader sqlDataReader, string columnName)
{
    int columnIndex = sqlDataReader.GetOrdinal(columnName);
    if (sqlDataReader.IsDBNull(columnIndex))
    {
        if (default(T) != null)
        {
            throw new InvalidCastException("Cannot convert DBNULL value to type " + typeof(T).Name);
        }
        else
        {
            return default(T);
        }
    }
    else
    {
        return sqlDataReader.GetFieldValue<T>(columnIndex);
    }
}

Usage:

string fname = sqlDataReader.Field<string>("FirstName");
int? age = sqlDataReader.Field<int?>("Age");
int yearsOfExperience = sqlDataReader.Field<int?>("YearsEx") ?? 0;
1

I am using the code listed below to handle null cells in an Excel sheet that is read in to a datatable.

if (!reader.IsDBNull(2))
{
   row["Oracle"] = (string)reader[2];
}
1
private static void Render(IList<ListData> list, IDataReader reader)
        {
            while (reader.Read())
            {

                listData.DownUrl = (reader.GetSchemaTable().Columns["DownUrl"] != null) ? Convert.ToString(reader["DownUrl"]) : null;
                //没有这一列时,让其等于null
                list.Add(listData);
            }
            reader.Close();
        }
1

and / or use ternary operator with assignment:

employee.FirstName = rdr.IsDBNull(indexFirstName))? 
                     String.Empty: rdr.GetString(indexFirstName);

replace the default (when null) value as appropriate for each property type...

0
1

This method is dependent on indexFirstName which should be the zero-based column ordinal.

if(!sqlReader.IsDBNull(indexFirstName))
{
  employee.FirstName = sqlreader.GetString(indexFirstName);
}

If you don't know the column index but wan't to check a name you can use this extension method instead:

public static class DataRecordExtensions
{
    public static bool HasColumn(this IDataRecord dr, string columnName)
    {
        for (int i=0; i < dr.FieldCount; i++)
        {
            if (dr.GetName(i).Equals(columnName, StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase))
                return true;
        }
        return false;
    }
}

And use the method like this:

if(sqlReader.HasColumn("FirstName"))
{
  employee.FirstName = sqlreader["FirstName"];
}
1

Old question but maybe someone still need an answer

in real i worked around this issue like that

For int :

public static object GatDataInt(string Query, string Column)
    {
        SqlConnection DBConn = new SqlConnection(ConnectionString);
        if (DBConn.State == ConnectionState.Closed)
            DBConn.Open();
        SqlCommand CMD = new SqlCommand(Query, DBConn);
        SqlDataReader RDR = CMD.ExecuteReader();
        if (RDR.Read())
        {
            var Result = RDR[Column];
            RDR.Close();
            DBConn.Close();
            return Result;
        }
        return 0;
    }

the same for string just return "" instead of 0 as "" is empty string

so you can use it like

int TotalPoints = GatDataInt(QueryToGetTotalPoints, TotalPointColumn) as int?;

and

string Email = GatDatastring(QueryToGetEmail, EmailColumn) as string;

very flexible so you can insert any query to read any column and it'll never return with error

1

neat one-liner:

    while (dataReader.Read())
{
    employee.FirstName = (!dataReader.IsDBNull(dataReader.GetOrdinal("FirstName"))) ? dataReader["FirstName"].ToString() : "";
}
0

Convert handles DbNull sensibly.

employee.FirstName = Convert.ToString(sqlreader.GetValue(indexFirstName));
1
  • Note that DBNull is converted to an empty string, not a null value.
    – Rhys Jones
    Jun 4, 2019 at 15:12
-3

you can ever check for this as well

if(null !=x && x.HasRows)
{ ....}
1
  • -1 This is not the point: we are handling the case of a null column value, not that of a null or empty SqlDataReader
    – bluish
    Sep 18, 2014 at 7:27

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