7

In how many languages is Null not equal to anything not even Null?

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  • 1
    Not a language, but floating point NaN is also not equal to itself.
    – Joren
    Nov 7, 2010 at 17:19

7 Answers 7

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It's this way in SQL (as a logic language) because null means unknown/undefined.

However, in programming languages (like say, C++ or C#), a null pointer/reference is a specific value with a specific meaning -- nothing.

Two nothings are equivilent, but two unknowns are not. The confusion comes from the fact that the same name (null) is used for both concepts.

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In VB6 the expression Null = Null will produce Null instead of True as you would expect. This will cause a runtime error if you try to assign it to a Boolean, however if you use it as the condition of "If ... Then" it will act like False. Moreover Null <> Null will also produce Null, so:

In VB6 you could say that Null is neither equal to itself (or anything else), nor unequal!

You're supposed to test for it using the IsNull() function.

VB6 also has other special values:

  • Nothing for object references. Nothing = Nothing is a compile error. (you're supposed to compare it using "is")
  • Missing for optional parameters which haven't been given. It has no literal representation so you can't even write Missing = Missing. (the test is IsMissing(foo))
  • Empty for uninitialized variables. This one does test equal to itself although there's also a function IsEmpty().
  • ... let me know if I've forgotten one

I remember being a bit disgusted with VB.

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Oracle is this way.

SELECT * FROM dual WHERE NULL=null;  --no rows returned
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    Actually, that is a property of SQL in general, it's not specific to Oracle.
    – sleske
    Mar 22, 2010 at 10:24
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MySQL has a null-safe equality operator, <=>, which returns true if both sides are equal or both sides are null. See MySQL Docs.

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  • +1 Interesting, but this should probably had been a comment on an SQL answer
    – Willbill
    Oct 14, 2009 at 11:17
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In C#, Nullable<bool> has interesting properties with respect to logical operators, but the equality operator is the same as other types in that language (i.e., ((bool?)null == (bool?)null) == true).

To preserve the short-circuited behavior of the short-circuited logical operators, and to preserve consistency with the non-short-circuited logical operators, the nullable boolean has some interesting properties. For example: true || null == true. false && null == false, etc. This stands in direct contradiction with other three-valued logic languages such as ANSI SQL.

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You can make ruby work that way:

class Null
 def self.==(other);false;end
end
n=Null
print "Null equals nothing" if n!=Null
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  • @Hugh: Well, one might say that, but it is possible, which means people will do it... whether that's good or bad is another matter.
    – sleske
    Mar 22, 2010 at 10:25
  • In ruby, null is called nil and NULL would not be defined giver the code posted. It is however perfectly possible to do what is implied here by typing: class NilClass; def ==(o); false; end; end Nov 7, 2010 at 21:16
  • Wow @ormuriauga - you caught a 2 year old typo. Fixed. Now it does create a Null which is not equal to itself, as the question asked.
    – AShelly
    Nov 8, 2010 at 17:58
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In SQL you would have to do something like:

WHERE column is NULL

rather than

WHERE column = NULL

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