As on Wikipedia, a "safe navigation operator" allows dereferencing an object property or array that might be null, giving a null result rather than an exception or error. Wikipedia lists the concepts as synonymous:
the safe navigation operator (also known as optional chaining operator, safe call operator, null-conditional operator)
However, these exist separately on SO:
safe-navigation-operator (23 questions). Term used on Wikipedia and in Angular documentation; used for a variety of languages but seem to be focused on Angular. No tag info.
optional-chaining (96 questions). Term used in TypeScript documentation; questions seem mostly about TypeScript. Tag info:
Optional chaining is a process for querying and calling properties, methods, and subscripts on an optional that might currently be nil/null . If the optional contains a value, the property, method, or subscript call succeeds; if the optional is nil/null , the property, method, or subscript call returns nil/null.
null-conditional-operator (69 questions). Questions seem to focus on C# (as this is the term used in C# documentation) with some VB and other languages. Tag info:
A Safe navigation operator used to test for null before performing a member access (
?.
) or index (?[]
) operation.
null-propagation-operator (32 questions). Questions are mostly C# with one Javascript outlier. Tag info:
The null-propagation operator, introduced in C# 6.0, eliminates the need for multiple null checks within a method call chain.
"safe call operator" doesn't exist, but by searching it seems that it refers to the same concept in Kotlin, as listed in Kotlin docs. We could pre-emptively create a tag synonym there, since it looks like that would be immediately useful.
The concept is clearly the same; the terms vary in usage based on the language in question, but we can already search with language tags to achieve the same result. I suggest the canonical name safe-navigation-operator to match Wikipedia and to make it easier to find cross-language requests ("how do I do optional chaining in [language X]?").
REVISED SUGGESTION: The existence of null-coalescing ("setting a default value if a condition evaluates to null") versus null-coalescing-operator (the specific language feature, with PHP in its taginfo) implies that maybe what we're looking for here is a common null-propagation tag to be created. I lean in favor of marking tags like optional-chaining, safe-navigation-operator, null-conditional-operator, and null-propagation-operator as synonyms of that general/conceptual tag, but there's an argument to be made that like with null-coalescing there's space for both tags.
null-conditional
operator. Since others have indicated this is too specific and other tags have subtle differences, I'm not so sure I'd want that as the common name; and I wouldn't want this key feature of a major programming language not to have its own tag.safe-navigation-operator
is the worst choice. I've done both C# and JS and never heard it called that. I just asked my coworker who does Angular and he didn't even recognize the term, he also described Angular's concept naming scheme to be so obscure as to be meaningless most of the time.multipartite-arborescent-graph
would need to become a synonym forforest