9

Can someone explain to me why in .NET I would write String.IsNullOrEmpty(str) instead of str.IsNullOrEmpty()? There must be a logical reason but I don't know it.

It sounds like you guys are saying

  1. You can't call methods from objects that are null in C#/.NET (I do it in C++, it just doesnt access any member vars)
  2. Extension methods didn't exist in .NET 2.0
  3. Microsoft didn't bother to update the standards and probably felt it was insignificant
4
  • 3
    Fun sidenote: you can actually do this in Smalltalk, because nil is also an object (it's the singleton instance of UndefinedObject).
    – Ash Wilson
    Dec 30, 2009 at 2:38
  • Using an extension method for this purpose is just plain wrong as it exploits an implementation detail of extension methods. You would effectively allow null.IsNullOrEmpty() to be a legal statement, even though it isn't compiled that way. Dec 30, 2009 at 15:05
  • Exact Duplicate of: stackoverflow.com/questions/734372 Jan 4, 2010 at 20:16
  • 1
    George Stocker: I didnt ask why there isnt a IsNotNullOrEmpty. I ask why i cant write "string".IsNotNullOrEmpty
    – user34537
    Jan 5, 2010 at 1:05

6 Answers 6

26

If IsNullOrEmpty were an instance method, calling it on a null instance would throw a NullReferenceException, not return false like you'd want.

It could be an extension method, but then it'd potentially be confusing -- it'd look like an instance method, but wouldn't act like one.

6
  • 8
    It could not be an extension method; it existed before C# 3.0.
    – jason
    Dec 30, 2009 at 1:56
  • 1
    @Jason, I think what he is saying is that you could make an extension method to handle that. Dec 30, 2009 at 1:58
  • 3
    Also, don't you want IsNullOrEmpty to return true when receiving a null instance of string?
    – jason
    Dec 30, 2009 at 2:10
  • 1
    Remember the good ole days in C++ where you could do stuff like bool IsNullOrEmpty(){ if(this == null) return true etc.
    – dkackman
    Dec 30, 2009 at 3:08
  • i think more correct answers are below. IsNullOrEmpty is a static method on the class String.
    – Jason
    Dec 30, 2009 at 5:12
9

If str is null, it won't have any accessable methods, because there isn't an instance of an object. You'd get a null reference exception for trying to call a method on a null object.

String.IsNullOrEmpty is static, so it will always be available to test string objects.

I guess you could argue that it might be handy to have str.IsEmpty (like Jonathan said, you could make an extenion method for the string object to handle this), but really it's just as easy to call String.IsNullOrEmpty(str) and covers both situations. Even though they are not the same, most people equate them to be so (in terms of business logic and verify a value exists for a string I mean) when handling values of strings.

5

String.IsNullOrEmpty is a class method.

If str was Nothing (Null) then you could not call a method on it. You can only call an instance method on an object.

1
  • It helps to mention that it is a static method of the instance class, not just a class method. If it was a class method then what he posted would have been true ie: string someobject; someobject.isnullorempty();
    – JonH
    Dec 30, 2009 at 2:27
4

IsNullOrEmpty is a static method on the string class; it is not an instance method. This is because if str is null it does not make sense to invoke an instance method as you would get a NullReferenceException. Thus, IsNullOrEmpty must be a static method.

4

I've been using an extension method for a while now. Works great.

 public static bool IsNullOrEmpty(this string val)
 {
     return string.IsNullOrEmpty(val);
 }

It obviously does the same thing as string.IsNullOrEmpty(string), but it's just easier to do something like

if(mystring.IsNullOrEmpty())
{
  //... do something
}
0

It would in some cases be nice if one could define default behaviors for statically-typed null references. Using extension methods, one can effectively achieve that in many cases. There are some gotchas, though. For example, casting an object to an unrelated type is generally forbidden in .net languages, since there are no cases where such behavior would be legitimate at runtime. On the other hand, if an object was null, it could be cast to object and then the Object null could be cast to another type. If the result of such a cast could be regarded as default instance of the latter type, the effect would be to render the cast semi-legitimate.

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