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Home/ Questions/Q 819029
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T02:14:33+00:00 2026-05-15T02:14:33+00:00

If I insert to Cache by assigning the value: Cache[key] = value; what’s the

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  1. If I insert to Cache by assigning the value:

    Cache[“key”] = value;

    what’s the expiration time?

  2. Removing the same value from Cache:

    I want to check if the value is in Cache by if(Cache["key"]!=null), is it better to remove it from Cache by Cache.Remove("key") or Cache["key"]=null ?

— Edit —

After having tried Cache.Remove and Cache["key"]=null, DO NOT USE Cache["key"]=null, as it will throw exceptions when used in stress.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T02:14:34+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 2:14 am

    1 Cache["key"] = value is equal to Cache.Insert("key", value)

    MSDN Cache.Insert – method (String, Object):

    This method will overwrite an existing
    cache item whose key matches the key
    parameter. The object added to the
    cache using this overload of the
    Insert method is inserted with no file
    or cache dependencies, a priority of
    Default, a sliding expiration value of
    NoSlidingExpiration, and an absolute
    expiration value of
    NoAbsoluteExpiration.

    2 It’s better to remove values from cache by Cache.Remove(“key”).
    If you use Cache["key"] = null it’s equal to Cache.Insert("key", null).
    Take a look at the Cache.Insert implementation:

    public void Insert(string key, object value)
    {
        this._cacheInternal.DoInsert(true, key, value, null, NoAbsoluteExpiration, NoSlidingExpiration, CacheItemPriority.Normal, null, true);
    }
    

    and CacheInternal.DoInsert:

    internal object DoInsert(bool isPublic, string key, object value, CacheDependency dependencies, DateTime utcAbsoluteExpiration, TimeSpan slidingExpiration, CacheItemPriority priority, CacheItemRemovedCallback onRemoveCallback, bool replace)
    {
        using (dependencies)
        {
            object obj2;
            CacheEntry cacheKey = new CacheEntry(key, value, dependencies, onRemoveCallback, utcAbsoluteExpiration, slidingExpiration, priority, isPublic);
            cacheKey = this.UpdateCache(cacheKey, cacheKey, replace, CacheItemRemovedReason.Removed, out obj2);
            if (cacheKey != null)
            {
                return cacheKey.Value;
            }
            return null;
        }
    }
    

    Compare it to Cache.Remove:

    public object Remove(string key)
    {
        CacheKey cacheKey = new CacheKey(key, true);
        return this._cacheInternal.DoRemove(cacheKey, CacheItemRemovedReason.Removed);
    }
    

    CacheInternal.DoRemove:

    internal object DoRemove(CacheKey cacheKey, CacheItemRemovedReason reason)
    {
        object obj2;
        this.UpdateCache(cacheKey, null, true, reason, out obj2);
        return obj2;
    }
    

    And finally Cache.Remove("key") is much more readble than Cache["key"] = null

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