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The null coalescing operator (called the Logical Defined-Or operator in
Perl Perl is a family of two High-level programming language, high-level, General-purpose programming language, general-purpose, Interpreter (computing), interpreted, dynamic programming languages. "Perl" refers to Perl 5, but from 2000 to 2019 it ...
) is a
binary operator In mathematics, a binary operation or dyadic operation is a rule for combining two elements (called operands) to produce another element. More formally, a binary operation is an operation of arity two. More specifically, an internal binary op ...
that is part of the syntax for a basic conditional expression in several
programming language A programming language is a system of notation for writing computer programs. Most programming languages are text-based formal languages, but they may also be graphical. They are a kind of computer language. The description of a programming l ...
s, including C#, PowerShell as of version 7.0.0,
Perl Perl is a family of two High-level programming language, high-level, General-purpose programming language, general-purpose, Interpreter (computing), interpreted, dynamic programming languages. "Perl" refers to Perl 5, but from 2000 to 2019 it ...
as of version 5.10, Swift, and
PHP PHP is a General-purpose programming language, general-purpose scripting language geared toward web development. It was originally created by Danish-Canadian programmer Rasmus Lerdorf in 1993 and released in 1995. The PHP reference implementati ...
7.0.0. While its behavior differs between implementations, the null coalescing operator generally returns the result of its left-most operand if it exists and is not null, and otherwise returns the right-most operand. This behavior allows a default value to be defined for cases where a more specific value is not available. In contrast to the ternary conditional if operator used as x ? x : y, but like the binary
Elvis operator In certain computer programming languages, the Elvis operator, often written ?:, is a binary operator that returns its first operand if that operand evaluates to a true value, and otherwise evaluates and returns its second operand. This is ident ...
used as x ?: y, the null coalescing operator is a binary operator and thus evaluates its operands at most once, which is significant if the evaluation of x has
side-effects In medicine, a side effect is an effect, whether therapeutic or adverse, that is secondary to the one intended; although the term is predominantly employed to describe adverse effects, it can also apply to beneficial, but unintended, consequence ...
.


Examples by languages


Bourne-like Shells

In Bourne shell (and derivatives), "If ''parameter'' is unset or null, the expansion of ''word'' is substituted. Otherwise, the value of ''parameter'' is substituted": #supplied_title='supplied title' # Uncomment this line to use the supplied title title=$ echo "$title" # prints: Default title


C#

In C#, the null coalescing operator is ??. It is most often used to simplify expressions as follows: possiblyNullValue ?? valueIfNull For example, if one wishes to implement some C# code to give a page a default title if none is present, one may use the following statement: string pageTitle = suppliedTitle ?? "Default Title"; instead of the more verbose string pageTitle = (suppliedTitle != null) ? suppliedTitle : "Default Title"; or string pageTitle; if (suppliedTitle != null) else The three forms result in the same value being stored into the variable named pageTitle. Note that suppliedTitle is referenced only once when using the ?? operator, and twice in the other two code examples. The operator can also be used multiple times in the same expression: return some_Value ?? some_Value2 ?? some_Value3; Once a non-null value is assigned to number, or it reaches the final value (which may or may not be null), the expression is completed. If, for example, a variable should be changed to another value if its value evaluates to null, since C# 8.0 the ??= null coalescing assignment operator can be used: some_Value ??= some_Value2; Which is a more concise version of: some_Value = some_Value ?? some_Value2; In combination with the null-conditional operator ?. or the null-conditional element access operator ?[] the null coalescing operator can be used to provide a default value if an object or an object’s member is null. For example the following will return the default title if either the page object is null or page is not null but its Title property is: string pageTitle = page?.Title ?? "Default Title";


CFML

As of ColdFusion 11, Railo 4.1, CFML supports the null coalescing operator as a variation of the ternary operator, ?:. It is functionally and syntactically equivalent to its C# counterpart, above. Example: possiblyNullValue ?: valueIfNull


F#

The null value is not normally used in F# for values or variables. However null values can appear for example when F# code is called from C#. F# does not have a built-in null coalescing operator but one can be defined as required as a custom operator: let (, ?) lhs rhs = (if lhs = null then rhs else lhs) This custom operator can then be applied as per C#'s built-in null coalescing operator: let pageTitle = suppliedTitle , ? "Default Title"


Freemarker

Missing values in Apache FreeMarker will normally cause exceptions. However, both missing and null values can be handled, with an optional default value: $ or, to leave the output blank: $


Haskell

Types in Haskell can in general not be null. Representation of computations that may or may not return a meaningful result is represented by the generic Maybe type, defined in the standard library as data Maybe a = Nothing , Just a The null coalescing operator replaces null pointers with a default value. The Haskell equivalent is a way of extracting a value from a Maybe by supplying a default value. This is the function fromMaybe. fromMaybe :: a -> Maybe a -> a fromMaybe defaultValue x = case x of Nothing -> defaultValue Just value -> value Some example usage follows. fromMaybe 0 (Just 3) -- returns 3 fromMaybe "" Nothing -- returns ""


JavaScript

JavaScript JavaScript (), often abbreviated as JS, is a programming language that is one of the core technologies of the World Wide Web, alongside HTML and CSS. As of 2022, 98% of Website, websites use JavaScript on the Client (computing), client side ...
's nearest operator is ??, the "nullish coalescing operator," which was added to the standard in ECMAScript's 11th edition. In earlier versions, it could be used via a Babel plugin, and in TypeScript. It evaluates its left-hand operand and, if the result value is not "nullish" (null or undefined), takes that value as its result; otherwise, it evaluates the right-hand operand and takes the resulting value as its result. In the following example, a will be assigned the value of b if the value of b is not null or undefined, otherwise it will be assigned 3. const a = b ?? 3; Before the nullish coalescing operator, programmers would use the logical OR operator (, , ). But where ?? looks specifically for null or undefined, the , , operator looks for any falsy value: null, undefined, "", 0, NaN, and of course, false. In the following example, a will be assigned the value of b if the value of b is truthy, otherwise it will be assigned 3. const a = b , , 3;


Kotlin

Kotlin uses the ?: operator.. This is an unusual choice of symbol, given that ?: is typically used for the
Elvis operator In certain computer programming languages, the Elvis operator, often written ?:, is a binary operator that returns its first operand if that operand evaluates to a true value, and otherwise evaluates and returns its second operand. This is ident ...
, not null coalescing, but it was inspired by Groovy (programming language) where null is considered false. val title = suppliedTitle ?: "Default title"


Objective-C

In Obj-C, the nil coalescing operator is ?:. It can be used to provide a default for nil references: id value = valueThatMightBeNil ?: valueIfNil; This is the same as writing id value = valueThatMightBeNil ? valueThatMightBeNil : valueIfNil;


Perl

In
Perl Perl is a family of two High-level programming language, high-level, General-purpose programming language, general-purpose, Interpreter (computing), interpreted, dynamic programming languages. "Perl" refers to Perl 5, but from 2000 to 2019 it ...
(starting with version 5.10), the operator is // and the equivalent Perl code is: $possibly_null_value // $value_if_null The ''possibly_null_value'' is evaluated as ''null'' or ''not-null'' (in Perl terminology, ''undefined'' or ''defined''). On the basis of the evaluation, the expression returns either ''value_if_null'' when ''possibly_null_value'' is null, or ''possibly_null_value'' otherwise. In the absence of
side-effects In medicine, a side effect is an effect, whether therapeutic or adverse, that is secondary to the one intended; although the term is predominantly employed to describe adverse effects, it can also apply to beneficial, but unintended, consequence ...
this is similar to the way ternary operators ( ?: statements) work in languages that support them. The above Perl code is equivalent to the use of the ternary operator below: defined($possibly_null_value) ? $possibly_null_value : $value_if_null This operator's most common usage is to minimize the amount of code used for a simple null check. Perl additionally has a //= assignment operator, where $a //= $b is largely equivalent to: $a = $a // $b This operator differs from Perl's older , , and , , = operators in that it considers ''definedness,'' not ''truth.'' Thus they behave differently on values that are false but defined, such as 0 or '' (a zero-length string): $a = 0; $b = 1; $c = $a // $b; # $c = 0 $c = $a , , $b; # $c = 1


PHP

PHP 7.0 introduced a null-coalescing operator with the ?? syntax. This checks strictly for NULL or a non-existent variable/array index/property. In this respect, it acts similarly to PHP's isset() pseudo-function: $name = $request->input name'?? $request->query name'?? 'default name'; /* Equivalent to */ if (isset($request->input name') elseif (isset($request->query name') else $user = $this->getUser() ?? $this->createGuestUser(); /* Equivalent to */ $user = $this->getUser(); if (null

$user)
$pageTitle = $title ?? 'Default Title'; /* Equivalent to */ $pageTitle = isset($title) ? $title : 'Default Title'; Version 7.4 of PHP will add the Null Coalescing Assignment Operator with the ??= syntax: // The following lines are doing the same $this->request->data comments''user_id'] = $this->request->data comments''user_id'] ?? 'value'; // Instead of repeating variables with long names, the equal coalesce operator is used $this->request->data comments''user_id'] ??= 'value';


Python

Python does ''not'' have a null coalescing operator. Its functionality can be mimicked using a conditional expression: now() if time is None else time There was a proposal to add null-coalescing-type operators in Python 3.8, but that proposal has been deferred.


Related functionality

Python's operator provides a related, but different behavior. The difference is that also returns the right hand term if the first term is defined, but has a value that evaluates to in a boolean context: 42 or "something" # returns 42 0 or "something" # returns "something" False or "something" # returns "something" "" or "something" # returns "something" [] or "something" # returns "something" dict() or "something" # returns "something" None or "something" # returns "something" A true null coalescing operator would only return in the very last case, and would return the false-ish values (, , , , ) in the other examples.


PowerShell

Since PowerShell 7, the ?? null coalescing operator provides this functionality. $myVar = $null $x = $myVar ?? "something" # assigns "something"


Rust

While there's no null in Rust, tagged unions are used for the same purpose. For example, Result or Option. unwrap_or_else() serves a similar purpose as the null coalescing operator in other languages. If the computation of the default value does not have side effects, unwrap_or() can be used as a more concise (and without optimizations, more efficient) choice. let parsed_numbers: Vec<_> = 1", "not a number", "3" .iter() .map(, n, n.parse().unwrap_or_else(, _, std::i64::MIN)) .collect(); // prints "
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println!("", parsed_numbers);


SQL

In Oracle's PL/SQL, the NVL() function provides the same outcome: NVL(possibly_null_value, 'value if null'); In SQL Server/ Transact-SQL there is the ISNULL function that follows the same prototype pattern: ISNULL(possibly_null_value, 'value if null'); Attention should be taken to not confuse ''ISNULL'' with ''IS NULL'' – the latter serves to evaluate whether some contents are defined to be ''NULL'' or not. The ANSI SQL-92 standard includes the COALESCE function implemented in Oracle, SQL Server, PostgreSQL, SQLite and
MySQL MySQL () is an open-source relational database management system (RDBMS). Its name is a combination of "My", the name of co-founder Michael Widenius's daughter My, and "SQL", the acronym for Structured Query Language. A relational database ...
. The COALESCE function returns the first argument that is not null. If all terms are null, returns null. COALESCE(possibly_null_value possibly_null_value, ...;


Swift

In Swift, the nil coalescing operator is ??. It is used to provide a default when unwrapping an
optional type In programming languages (especially functional programming languages) and type theory, an option type or maybe type is a polymorphic type that represents encapsulation of an optional value; e.g., it is used as the return type of functions whic ...
: optionalValue ?? valueIfNil For example, if one wishes to implement some Swift code to give a page a default title if none is present, one may use the following statement: var suppliedTitle: String? = ... var pageTitle: String = suppliedTitle ?? "Default Title" instead of the more verbose var pageTitle: String = (suppliedTitle != nil) ? suppliedTitle! : "Default Title";


VB.NET

In VB.NET the If{{cite web, url=https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/visual-basic/language-reference/operators/if-operator, title=If Operator (Visual Basic), last=dotnet-bot, website=docs.microsoft.com operator/keyword achieves the null coalescing operator effect. Dim pageTitle = If(suppliedTitle, "Default Title") which is a more concise way of using its variation Dim pageTitle = If(suppliedTitle <> Nothing, suppliedTitle, "Default Title")


See also

* ?: (
conditional Conditional (if then) may refer to: * Causal conditional, if X then Y, where X is a cause of Y * Conditional probability, the probability of an event A given that another event B has occurred *Conditional proof, in logic: a proof that asserts a ...
) *
Elvis operator In certain computer programming languages, the Elvis operator, often written ?:, is a binary operator that returns its first operand if that operand evaluates to a true value, and otherwise evaluates and returns its second operand. This is ident ...
(binary ?:) * Null-conditional operator * Operator (programming)


References

Conditional constructs Operators (programming) Binary operations