null coalescing translates roughly to return x, unless it is null, in which case return y
I often need return null if x is null, otherwise return x.y
I can use return x == null ? null : x.y;
Not bad, but that null
in the middle always bothers me -- it seems superfluous. I'd prefer something like return x :: x.y;
, where what follows the ::
is evaluated only if what precedes it is not null
.
I see this as almost an opposite to null coalescence, kind of mixed in with a terse, inline null-check, but I'm [almost] certain that there is no such operator in C#.
(I know that I can write a method for it in C#; I use return NullOrValue.of(x, () => x.y);
, but if you have anything better, I'd like to see that too.)
There's the null-safe dereferencing operator (?.) in Groovy... I think that's what you're after.
(It's also called the safe navigation operator.)
For example:
homePostcode = person?.homeAddress?.postcode
This will give null if person
, person.homeAddress
or person.homeAddress.postcode
is null.
(This is now available in C# 6.0 but not in earlier versions)