The default value of a nullable value type represents null , that is, it's an instance whose Nullable<T>. HasValue property returns false .
It is a shorthand for Nullable<int> . Nullable<T> is used to allow a value type to be set to null . Value types usually cannot be null.
If no default value is declared explicitly, the default value is the null value. This usually makes sense because a null value can be considered to represent unknown data. In a table definition, default values are listed after the column data type.
The default value for int? -- and for any nullable type that uses the "type?" declaration -- is null.
Why this is the case:
int? is syntactic sugar for the type Nullable<T> (where T is int), a struct. (reference)Nullable<T> type has a bool HasValue member, which when false, makes the Nullable<T> instance "act like" a null value. In particular, the Nullable<T>.Equals method is overridden to return true when a Nullable<T> with HasValue == false is compared with an actual null value.null. bool variable in C# is false (reference). Therefore, the HasValue property of a default Nullable<T> instance is false; which in turn makes that Nullable<T> instance itself act like null.I felt important to share the Nullable<T>.GetValueOrDefault() method which is particularly handy when working with math computations that use Nullable<int> aka int? values. There are many times when you don't have to check HasValue property and you can just use GetValueOrDefault() instead.
var defaultValueOfNullableInt = default(int?);
Console.WriteLine("defaultValueOfNullableInt == {0}", (defaultValueOfNullableInt == null) ? "null" : defaultValueOfNullableInt.ToString());
var defaultValueOfInt = default(int);
Console.WriteLine("defaultValueOfInt == {0}", defaultValueOfInt);
Console.WriteLine("defaultValueOfNullableInt.GetValueOrDefault == {0}", defaultValueOfNullableInt.GetValueOrDefault());

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