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My question is about the c# info page, here on Stack Overflow: https://stackoverflow.com/tags/c%23/info

To be precise, my question is about this sentence

C# 8.0 will introduce nullable reference types which enables reference types (e.g. string) to be null,

I believe the wording seems off, for me it reads like prior to c# 8 a reference type couldn't be null and c# 8 will introduce the ability to store a null in a reference type, eg. that this would be impossible in c# prior to version 8:

string foo = null;

And only with c# 8 its possible to declare a nullable reference type by doing this:

string? foo = null;

Which, I believe, is wrong - c# always made it possible that a reference type could be null.

There was no explicit way to distinguish a nullable from a non-nullable reference type and every reference type was in fact a nullable.

My attempt to summarize the feature in one small sentence would be:

C# 8.0 will introduce an explicit way to define nullable reference types (eg. string? (nullable), string (non-nullable)), ...

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  • 2
    Generally, the C# chat room probably is the right place to discuss the C# tag info. If you already have a proposal for how to adjust it, you can also just go ahead and edit (after the currently pending edit is reviewed, that is).
    – Erik A
    Dec 18, 2018 at 15:15
  • @ErikvonAsmuth - didn't know I could edit the info tag - I will give this question, some time before trying my luck in the chat - thx for that info Dec 18, 2018 at 15:28
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    The tag wiki seems like a really poor place to try to describe possible features of unreleased versions of a language. Honestly I don't see the tag wiki to be a place to just list out every feature in every version of a language, but at a minimum you'd want to keep it to versions of the language that are actually released.
    – Servy
    Dec 18, 2018 at 15:54
  • The name of the feature is correct, the source calls them nullable reference types. It's the description that's incorrect.
    – user247702
    Dec 18, 2018 at 15:55
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    @Stijn - totally agree with you thats why my "proposal" still contains the name tries a different take in the describing part Dec 18, 2018 at 15:57
  • My bad, seems like I misread your proposed change. Looks good.
    – user247702
    Dec 18, 2018 at 15:58
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    I altered it. Pray, if needs be, alter it further.
    – user1228
    Dec 18, 2018 at 16:21
  • Yes, the name is official (but also misleading). The novelty are never-null reference variables. But altogether better to remove this from the tag description.
    – bommelding
    Dec 20, 2018 at 11:40

2 Answers 2

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I follow c# rather closely, but since it is holiday time haven't read every nuance. This one seems to be interesting, although it does introduce technical debt unfortunately.

Any variable where the ? is not appended to the type name is a non-nullable reference type. That includes all reference type variables in existing code when you have enabled this feature.

  • The variable must be initialized to a non-null value.
  • The variable can never be assigned the value null.

This is a rather interesting caveat indeed, since I am sure many older codebases have initialized a reference type to null in order to use it later. Not to mention the default keyword. That said, there is a lot of nuance involved in these types of situations and it is probably best to simply leave this amount of nuance to the actual MSDN posts on them #RTFM (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/nullable-references).

Tag wikis in general suffer from neglect in development. They have never really changed, and are a sort of barely organized chaos. Still, they should at the very least be accurate. What they don't need, as stated above, is such granularity.

I would suggest simply taking note of the overall improvements of C# 8, as the other versions do, and leave it there for others to investigate on their own if interested.

C# 8.0, currently in preview, will introduce nullable reference types, ranges and indices, and asynchronous streams.

Let's not get too verbose in the tag wikis, they are already massive and relatively unorganized (mostly due to a lack of available features for organization). There is a strength in brevity.

4
  • The language still remains terrible. In say, C# 4, MyObject is still a reference type (as opposed to being a value type, i.e. a struct), and it could still be set to nil then. What it should be called is a "annotation", i.e. a "nullable annotation for reference type". Apple uses this language for the Swift language, which have "optionals" (essentially what C# is adding in 8.0) Dec 20, 2018 at 0:07
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    "This is a rather interesting caveat indeed, since I am sure many older codebases have initialized a reference type to null in order to use it later...." AFAIK this is an opt-in behavior, it won't change automatically Dec 20, 2018 at 11:27
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    @ClausJørgensen I don't see how that comment is relevant. How is c# 4 relevant to a c# 8 question? How is an Apple language relevant? That comment is just unwanted rant Dec 20, 2018 at 11:29
  • @CamiloTerevinto - That is correct. Either in the project settings file (.csproj) or by use of a nullable context. My point was using it would introduce some level of technical debt in order to convert.
    – Travis J
    Dec 20, 2018 at 19:41
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Just for readability I'd use backticks ` around types. Especially now that the question mark ? will be used profusely it is important to see that it's not part of the sentence.

Compare this:

C# 8.0 will introduce an explicit way to define nullable reference types (eg. string? (nullable), string (non-nullable)), ...

To this:

C# 8.0 will introduce an explicit way to define nullable reference types (eg. string? (nullable), string (non-nullable)), ...

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