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Home/ Questions/Q 32633
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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T13:47:37+00:00 2026-05-10T13:47:37+00:00

I’m using int as an example, but this applies to any value type in

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I’m using int as an example, but this applies to any value type in .Net

In .Net 1 the following would throw a compiler exception:

int i = SomeFunctionThatReturnsInt();  if( i == null ) //compiler exception here 

Now (in .Net 2 or 3.5) that exception has gone.

I know why this is:

int? j = null; //nullable int  if( i == j )   //this shouldn't throw an exception 

The problem is that because int? is nullable and int now has a implicit cast to int?. The syntax above is compiler magic. Really we’re doing:

Nullable<int> j = null; //nullable int  //compiler is smart enough to do this if( (Nullable<int>) i == j)     //and not this if( i == (int) j) 

So now, when we do i == null we get:

if( (Nullable<int>) i == null ) 

Given that C# is doing compiler logic to calculate this anyway why can’t it be smart enough to not do it when dealing with absolute values like null?

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  1. 2026-05-10T13:47:38+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 1:47 pm

    I don’t think this is a compiler problem per se; an integer value is never null, but the idea of equating them isn’t invalid; it’s a valid function that always returns false. And the compiler knows; the code

    bool oneIsNull = 1 == null; 

    compiles, but gives a compiler warning: The result of the expression is always 'false' since a value of type 'int' is never equal to 'null' of type '<null>'.

    So if you want the compiler error back, go to the project properties and turn on ‘treat warnings as errors’ for this error, and you’ll start seeing them as build-breaking problems again.

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