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Home/ Questions/Q 8560507
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 11, 20262026-06-11T16:17:29+00:00 2026-06-11T16:17:29+00:00

With the following code: Guid? x = null; List<Guid?> y = new List<Guid?>(); y.Add(x);

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With the following code:

Guid? x = null;
List<Guid?> y = new List<Guid?>();
y.Add(x);

I would expect the following code to return true y.Contains(x); but it returns false.

So this is sort of a two part question.

  1. Why does it return false when clearly there x in the list?
  2. How would I loop through a Guid? List to check if a null Guid? or Guid? with value is in the list?
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-11T16:17:30+00:00Added an answer on June 11, 2026 at 4:17 pm

    Let’s examine your code. What it really says without the syntactic sugar is:

    Nullable<Guid> x = new Nullable<Guid>(new Guid());
    List<Nullable<Guid>> y = new List<Nullable<Guid>>();
    y.Add(x);
    

    Explanation

    Nullable<> is actually a struct, so it’s not really ever null; only its Value property has a chance of being null, but since its underlying type (Guid) is also a struct, nothing in your list is ever really null.

    So why did I explain that? Well, when it comes time for List<>.Contains() to do its magic, the conditions of the combination of the two struct‘s Equals() methods are determining that your empty Guids don’t equal.

    The nullable equality operator that takes two nullable guids is applicable in this situation, will be called, and will always return false.

    Source

    How do we fix it?

    Since having Nullable in your solution is pretty useless, I would refactor your code to get rid of it. Guid instead has a handy-dandy Empty property we can use instead:

    Guid x = Guid.Empty;
    List<Guid> y = new List<Guid>();
    y.Add(x);
    
    Console.WriteLine(y.Contains(x)); // True
    Console.WriteLine(y.Contains(Guid.Empty)); // True
    

    See the above in action: Ideone

    Again, check out this post from Eric Lippert for more information.

    Update:

    If you’re looking for all null (or Empty) items in the list, perhaps it would make more sense to check for items x in the list where x.HasValue is false:

    var myList = new List<Guid>();
    ... /* add to myList */
    var theEmpties = myList.Where(x => x == Guid.Empty);
    
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