Typically the main use of the question mark is for the conditional, x ? "yes" : "no"
.
But I have seen another use for it but can't find an explanation of this use of the ?
operator, for example.
public int? myProperty
{
get;
set;
}
Typically the main use of the question mark is for the conditional, x ? "yes" : "no"
.
But I have seen another use for it but can't find an explanation of this use of the ?
operator, for example.
public int? myProperty
{
get;
set;
}
It means that the value type in question is a nullable type
Nullable types are instances of the System.Nullable struct. A nullable type can represent the correct range of values for its underlying value type, plus an additional null value. For example, a
Nullable<Int32>
, pronounced "Nullable of Int32," can be assigned any value from -2147483648 to 2147483647, or it can be assigned the null value. ANullable<bool>
can be assigned the values true, false, or null. The ability to assign null to numeric and Boolean types is especially useful when you are dealing with databases and other data types that contain elements that may not be assigned a value. For example, a Boolean field in a database can store the values true or false, or it may be undefined.class NullableExample { static void Main() { int? num = null; // Is the HasValue property true? if (num.HasValue) { System.Console.WriteLine("num = " + num.Value); } else { System.Console.WriteLine("num = Null"); } // y is set to zero int y = num.GetValueOrDefault(); // num.Value throws an InvalidOperationException if num.HasValue is false try { y = num.Value; } catch (System.InvalidOperationException e) { System.Console.WriteLine(e.Message); } } }
int
type and a corresponding Integer
class, for example.
It is a shorthand for Nullable<int>
. Nullable<T>
is used to allow a value type to be set to null
. Value types usually cannot be null.
value types
cannot be null. If you declare an int or a bool (which are value types) without specifically assigning a value, they would still have values (0 and false, respectively), ie. they would not be null. Unassigned reference types
, such as object or MyClass, will, on the other hand, be null. You might want to read up on the difference between value types and reference types.
Jun 30, 2017 at 22:39
In
x ? "yes" : "no"
the ? declares an if sentence. Here: x represents the boolean condition; The part before the : is the then sentence and the part after is the else sentence.
In, for example,
int?
the ? declares a nullable type, and means that the type before it may have a null value.
return value ? value : "isNull";
tells me that string value
isnt convertable into bool.
practical usage:
public string someFunctionThatMayBeCalledWithNullAndReturnsString(int? value)
{
if (value == null)
{
return "bad value";
}
return someFunctionThatHandlesIntAndReturnsString(value);
}
int?
is shorthand for Nullable<int>
. The two forms are interchangeable.
Nullable<T>
is an operator that you can use with a value type T
to make it accept null
.
In case you don't know it: value types are types that accepts values as int
, bool
, char
etc...
They can't accept references to values: they would generate a compile-time error if you assign them a null
, as opposed to reference types, which can obviously accept it.
Why would you need that? Because sometimes your value type variables could receive null references returned by something that didn't work very well, like a missing or undefined variable returned from a database.
I suggest you to read the Microsoft Documentation because it covers the subject quite well.
public Item? item { get; set; };
with public Nullable<Item> item { get; set; };
where Item is some trivial class.
Sep 7, 2022 at 16:24
Item
has to be a value type (a struct) - classes are reference types. A nullable reference type is something quite different, unfortunately with identical syntax which causes some confusion.
Means that the variable declared with (int?) is nullable
int i1=1; //ok
int i2=null; //not ok
int? i3=1; //ok
int? i4=null; //ok
To add on to the answers above, here is a code sample
struct Test
{
int something;
}
struct NullableTest
{
int something;
}
class Example
{
public void Demo()
{
Test t = new Test();
t = null;
NullableTest? t2 = new NullableTest();
t2 = null;
}
}
This would give a compilation error:
Error 12 Cannot convert null to 'Test' because it is a non-nullable value type
Notice that there is no compilation error for NullableTest. (note the ? in the declaration of t2)
To add on to the other answers:
Starting in C# 8.0, Nullable<>
and ?
are NOT always interchangeable. Nullable<>
only works with Value types, whereas ?
works with both Reference and Value types.
These can be seen here in the documentation
"A nullable reference type is noted using the same syntax as nullable value types: a
?
is appended to the type of the variable."
And here
public struct Nullable<T> where T : struct