This is not a complaining question :)
I asked what I thought to be a pretty specific question:
How does the ?. (Safe Navigation Operator) work in c# 6.0 (VS 2015 CTP)?
Currently there is no Safe Navigation Operator (?.) for C#. You have to do something like this. Safe Navigation Operator in C#?
According to this blog post and this post. C# 6.0 might be getting a safe navigation operator.
Apparently, this new language functionality should exist in the VS2015 CTP. source
The syntax is pretty easy to understand
var result = Obj1?.obj2?.obj3?.obj4.thing;
At any point objects 1, 2, 3, or 4 could be null which makes 'result' null. It eliminates having to write code for a bunch of null checks.
Specifically, how does the compiler accomplish this?
A simple solution I can think of would be to generate a bunch of 'if' statements for each object, but that may be considered 'sloppy' by some. Does anyone now how the compiler actually does it?
It was closed as too broad. In my mind I envisioned this question as answerable by writing some code with the "?." operator in C# 6 in the VS2015 CTP and inspecting the IDL.
One of the comments on the question even suggested that I do it myself. Very possible, right?
I'm probably missing something. I'm not offended that the question was closed, but would like some clarification since the folks who voted to close the question and delete it didn't offer any comments.
I could possibly see an argument for a duplicate question, but even then I tried direct the question towards the behavior of the compiler which weren't the thrust of similar "what is the ?. operator in C#" types of questions.