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)), ...