10

I'm having problems with a Nullable DateTime in VB.NET (VS 2010).

Method 1

If String.IsNullOrEmpty(LastCalibrationDateTextBox.Text) Then
    gauge.LastCalibrationDate = Nothing
Else
    gauge.LastCalibrationDate = DateTime.Parse(LastCalibrationDateTextBox.Text)
End If

Method 2

gauge.LastCalibrationDate = If(String.IsNullOrEmpty(LastCalibrationDateTextBox.Text), Nothing, DateTime.Parse(LastCalibrationDateTextBox.Text))

When given an empty string Method 1 assigns a Null (Nothing) value to gauge.LastCalibrationDate but Method 2 assigns it the DateTime.MinValue.

In other places in my code I have:

LastCalibrationDate = If(IsDBNull(dr("LastCalibrationDate")), Nothing, dr("LastCalibrationDate"))

This correctly assigns Null (Nothing) from a Ternary Operator to a Nullable DateTime.

What am I missing? Thanks!

1
  • Please can you add gauge.LastCalibrationData definition that you use in your code ?
    – schlebe
    Jul 3, 2020 at 6:31

2 Answers 2

18

Bob Mc is correct. Pay extra attention to his second point - this isn't the case in C#.

What you need to do is force Nothing to a nullable DateTime by casting it as follows:

gauge.LastCalibrationDate = If(String.IsNullOrEmpty(LastCalibrationDateTextBox.Text), CType(Nothing, DateTime?), DateTime.Parse(LastCalibrationDateTextBox.Text))

Here is a snippet to demonstrate:

Dim myDate As DateTime?
' try with the empty string, then try with DateTime.Now.ToString '
Dim input = ""
myDate = If(String.IsNullOrEmpty(input), CType(Nothing, DateTime?), DateTime.Parse(input))
Console.WriteLine(myDate)

Instead of casting you can also declare a new nullable: New Nullable(Of DateTime) or New DateTime?(). The latter format looks a little odd but it's valid.

1
  • 3
    +1 Nice job adding the workaround that will produce the desired result.
    – Bob Mc
    Nov 16, 2010 at 16:02
17

I will admit that I'm not an expert on this, but apparently it stems from two things:

  1. The If ternary operator can return only one type, in this case a date type, not a nullable date type
  2. The VB.Net Nothing value is not actually null but is equivalent to the default value of the specified type, in this case a date, not a nullable date. Hence the date minimum value.

I derived most of the information for this answer from this SO post: Ternary operator VB vs C#: why resolves to integer and not integer?

Hope this helps and that someone like Joel Coehoorn can shed more light on the subject.

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