PRE-EDIT:
Given that you've said in the comments that "If the textbox is empty, the program should do nothing", why not just do this:
if (textBox1.Text.Length > 0)
{
//DO STUFF HERE
}
else
{
//DO NOTHING HERE
}
If you really need to return a null value, you can use one of these two options:
private char? getLastChar()
{
if (textBox1.Text.Length > 0)
return textBox1.Text[textBox1.Text.Length - 1];
else
return null;
}
You would use it like this:
char? lastCharInTextBox = getLastChar();
if (lastCharInTextBox == null)
{
//Do something about empty text box
}
else
{
char myVar = lastCharInTextBox.Value;
//Do something with the character inside "myVar"
}
Chars are value types, which means that they cannot be set to null references. Using a question mark will make the char nullable.
Alternatively, you could do the following:
private char getLastChar()
{
if (textBox1.Text.Length > 0)
return textBox1.Text[textBox1.Text.Length - 1];
else
return 0;
}
This would return a normal char, but would return a null terminator character if the textbox has no text.