int n == 0;
if (n == null)
{
Console.WriteLine("......");
}
Is it true that the result of expression (n == null) is always false since
a value of type int is never equal to null of type int? (see warning below)
Warning CS0472 The result of the expression is always ‘false’ since a value of type ‘int’ is never equal to ‘null’ of type ‘int?’
If you want your integer variable to allow null values, declare it to be a nullable type:
Note the
?after int, which means that type can have the valuenull. Nullable types were introduced with v2.0 of the .NET Framework.