The following doesn't compile:
public void MyMethod<T>(T value) { if (value == default(T)) { // do stuff } } Error: Operator '==' cannot be applied to operands of type 'T' and 'T'
I can't use value == null because T may be a struct.
I can't use value.Equals(default(T)) because value may be null.
What is the proper way to test for equality to the default value?
You can set the default values for variables by adding ! default flag to the end of the variable value. It will not re-assign the value, if it is already assigned to the variable.
The default keyword returns the "default" or "empty" value for a variable of the requested type. For all reference types (defined with class , delegate , etc), this is null . For value types (defined with struct , enum , etc) it's an all-zeroes value (for example, int 0 , DateTime 0001-01-01 00:00:00 , etc).
To avoid boxing for struct / Nullable<T>, I would use:
if (EqualityComparer<T>.Default.Equals(value,default(T))) { // do stuff } This supports any T that implement IEquatable<T>, using object.Equals as a backup, and handles null etc (and lifted operators for Nullable<T>) automatically.
There is also Comparer<T>.Default which handles comparison tests. This handles T that implement IComparable<T>, falling back to IComparable - again handling null and lifted operators.
What about
object.Equals(value, default(T))
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