Passing null arguments to C# methods

Yes. There are two kinds of types in .NET: reference types and value types.

References types (generally classes) are always referred to by references, so they support null without any extra work. This means that if a variable’s type is a reference type, the variable is automatically a reference.

Value types (e.g. int) by default do not have a concept of null. However, there is a wrapper for them called Nullable. This enables you to encapsulate the non-nullable value type and include null information.

The usage is slightly different, though.

// Both of these types mean the same thing, the ? is just C# shorthand.
private void Example(int? arg1, Nullable<int> arg2)
{
    if (arg1.HasValue)
        DoSomething();

    arg1 = null; // Valid.
    arg1 = 123;  // Also valid.

    DoSomethingWithInt(arg1); // NOT valid!
    DoSomethingWithInt(arg1.Value); // Valid.
}

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