79

The following doesn't compile:

public void MyMethod<T>(T value)
{
    if (value == default(T))
    {
        // do stuff
    }
}

Error: Operator '==' cannot be applied to operands of type 'T' and 'T'

I can't use value == null because T may be a struct.
I can't use value.Equals(default(T)) because value may be null.
What is the proper way to test for equality to the default value?

2

2 Answers 2

114

To avoid boxing for struct / Nullable<T>, I would use:

if (EqualityComparer<T>.Default.Equals(value,default(T)))
{
    // do stuff
}

This supports any T that implement IEquatable<T>, using object.Equals as a backup, and handles null etc (and lifted operators for Nullable<T>) automatically.

There is also Comparer<T>.Default which handles comparison tests. This handles T that implement IComparable<T>, falling back to IComparable - again handling null and lifted operators.

3
  • 1
    Are you saying that EqualityComparer<T>.Default.Equals has better performance than Object.Equals, or that it would give a correct value in some case that Object.Equals wouldn't?
    – Greg
    Dec 13, 2009 at 22:57
  • 13
    Better performance (less boxing); consider T=int; to call object.Equals it has to box value and default(T) - that's two extra heap allocations + GC. Using EqualityComparer<T> it has 3 different underlying implementations - class, Nullable<T> and struct - it can then do everything (including null tests) without any boxing. The work of figuring out which implementation to use is only done once per type and cached, so still very fast. Dec 13, 2009 at 23:27
  • @MarcGravell I can't seem to get this to work. I created a function with this inside to try and determine if the structure is still the default value. It seems to always return FALSE (not default value). Did I do something wrong? Ref: stackoverflow.com/questions/35897019/…
    – Arvo Bowen
    Mar 9, 2016 at 16:30
39

What about

object.Equals(value, default(T))
3
  • I knew it should be simple. Thank you.
    – Greg
    Dec 13, 2009 at 6:46
  • 2
    +1. Tested. Works correctly with various types: MyMethod(0); MyMethod<String>(null); MyMethod<DataSet>(null); - in each case returns true. Dec 13, 2009 at 9:25
  • 2
    The downside with this is that it will unnecessarily box value types (which is why EqualityComparer<T>.Default.Equals is preferred)
    – canton7
    Jul 21, 2020 at 13:12

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