As I开发者_Python百科 understand default(object) where 'object' is any reference type always returns null, but can I specify what a default is? For instance, I want default(object) == new object();
No. default(type)
will always return the same thing - a "zero'ed out" version of that type. For a reference type, this is a handle to an object that is always set with a value of zero - which equates to null
. For a value type, this is always the struct with all members set to zero.
There is no way to override this behavior - the language specification is designed this way.
Edit: As to your comment:
Just to be able to say
FirstOrDefault()
and never get a null.
I would not recommend this in any case. Users expect FirstOrDefault()
to return null
on failure. It would be better to write your own extension method:
static T FirstOrNewInstance<T>(this IEnumerable<T> sequence) where T : class, new()
{
return sequence.FirstOrDefault() ?? new T();
}
Sorry, I'm not Jon Skeet...
But anyway, the answer is "no you can't"
You can do something like this, it will call parameterless constructor
public static T NewInstanceByType<T>(Type type) => (T)Activator.CreateInstance(type);
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