Introduction The article demonstrates the use of null-state analysis to remove compiler warnings of “check code for null safety”. Learning Objectives Discover how to set up the nullable context in your C# project or codebase. Prerequisites for Developers Familiarity with introductory-level C# programming Know how to use Visual Studio Code or Visual Studio .NET SDK version 6.0 or newer Getting Started .NET developers often face the System.NullReferenceException, which happens when a null is referenced at runtime and results in the most common exception in the .NET application. As the creator of null, Sir Tony Hoare, refers to null as the "billion-dollar mistake." Example The variable records is set to null and then immediately referenced which results in System.NullReferenceException TestRecord records = null; _ = records.ToString(); record TestRecord(int Id, string Name); As the applications grow in the number of lines of code and become more complex, spotting such issues as a developer can be challenging. This is where C# compiler steps in. Define null safety In the previous example, a developer can avoid the System.NullReferenceExceptionby checking if the records variable was null as shown below. TestRecord records = null; // Check for null if (records is not null) { _ = records.ToString(); } record TestRecord(int Id, string Name); Nullable Types The default value for all reference types is null. string first; // first is null string second = string.Empty // second is not null, instead it's an empty string "" int third; // third is 0 because int is a value type DateTime date; // date is DateTime.MinValue In the example mentioned earlier: The variable “first” is null because a reference type “string” was declared but not assigned any value. The variable “second” is assigned the value “string.Empty” during declaration. The variable “third” has a value of 0 even though it was not explicitly assigned. The variable “date” is uninitialized, but its default value is “System.DateTime.MinValue.” Post C# 2.0 version, we can define nullable values using Nullable<T>. This allowed value types to be assigned with a value of null. int? first; // first is implicitly null (uninitialized) int? second = null; // second is explicitly null int? third = default; // third is null as the default value for Nullable<Int32> is null int? fourth = new(); // fourth is 0, since new calls the nullable constructor Nullable context As per my experience, this is a must-have feature that should be enabled in every .Net application as it enables control for how the compiler understands reference type variables. There are four types of nullable contexts disable enable warnings annotations Enable nullable context it can be enabled by adding <Nullable> item to the <PropertyGroup> inside the application .csproj file as shown below <Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk"> <PropertyGroup> <OutputType>Exe</OutputType> <TargetFramework>net6.0</TargetFramework> <Nullable>enable</Nullable> </PropertyGroup> <!-- Omitted for brevity --> </Project> Alternatively, developers can also add scope nullable context which means the nullable context will be applicable only in the defined scope. #nullable enable Complete Code on GitHub GitHub — ssukhpinder/30DayChallenge.Net C# Programming🚀 Thank you for being a part of the C# community! Before you leave: If you’ve made it this far, please show your appreciation with a clap and follow the author! 👏️️ Follow us: | | | | | X LinkedIn Dev.to Hashnode Newsletter Tumblr Visit our other platforms: | | | | GitHub Instagram Tiktok Quora Daily.dev More content at C# Programming Also published . here