In Nullable micro-optimizations, part one, Eric mentions that Nullable<T> has a strange boxing behaviour that could not be achieved by a similar user-defined type.
What are the special features that the C# language grants to the predefined Nullable<T> type? Especially the ones that could not be made to work on a MyNullable type.
Of course, Nullable<T> has special syntactic sugar T?, but my question is more about semantics.
What I was getting at is: there is no such thing as a boxed nullable. When you box an
int, you get a reference to a boxedint. When you box anint?, you get either a null reference or a reference to a boxedint. You never get a boxedint?.You can easily make your own
Optional<T>struct, but you can’t implement a struct that has that boxing behaviour.Nullable<T>‘s special behaviour is baked into the runtime.This fact leads to a number of oddities. For example:
C# 4: Dynamic and Nullable<>
C# Reflection: How to get the type of a Nullable<int>?
Cannot change type to nullable in generic method
And FYI there are other ways in which the
Nullable<T>type is “magical”. For instance, though it is a struct type, it does not satisfy the struct constraint. There’s no way for you to make your own struct that has that property.