So I frequently run into this situation… where Do.Something(...) returns a null collection, like so:
int[] returnArray = Do.Something(...);
Then, I try to use this collection like so:
foreach (int i in returnArray)
{
// do some more stuff
}
I’m just curious, why can’t a foreach loop operate on a null collection? It seems logical to me that 0 iterations would get executed with a null collection… instead it throws a NullReferenceException. Anyone know why this could be?
This is annoying as I’m working with APIs that aren’t clear on exactly what they return, so I end up with if (someCollection != null) everywhere.
Well, the short answer is “because that’s the way the compiler designers designed it.” Realistically, though, your collection object is null, so there’s no way for the compiler to get the enumerator to loop through the collection.
If you really need to do something like this, try the null coalescing operator: