DBNull.Value Field
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Represents the sole instance of the DBNull class.
public: static initonly DBNull ^ Value;
public static readonly DBNull Value;
staticval mutable Value : DBNull
Public Shared ReadOnly Value As DBNull
Field Value
Examples
The following example calls the DBNull.Value.Equals
method to determine whether a database field in a contacts database has a valid value. If it does, the field value is appended to the string output in a label.
private void OutputLabels(DataTable dt)
{
string label;
// Iterate rows of table
foreach (DataRow row in dt.Rows)
{
int labelLen;
label = String.Empty;
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Title");
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "FirstName");
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "MiddleInitial");
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "LastName");
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Suffix");
label += "\n";
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Address1");
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "AptNo");
label += "\n";
labelLen = label.Length;
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Address2");
if (label.Length != labelLen)
label += "\n";
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "City");
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "State");
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Zip");
Console.WriteLine(label);
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
private string AddFieldValue(string label, DataRow row,
string fieldName)
{
if (!DBNull.Value.Equals(row[fieldName]))
return (string) row[fieldName] + " ";
else
return String.Empty;
}
member this.OutputLabels(dt: DataTable) =
let mutable label = ""
// Iterate rows of table
for row in dt.Rows do
let mutable label = String.Empty
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "Title")
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "FirstName")
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "MiddleInitial")
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "LastName")
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "Suffix")
label <- label + "\n"
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "Address1")
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "AptNo")
label <- label + "\n"
let labelLen = label.Length
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "Address2")
let labelLen =
if label.Length <> labelLen then
label + "\n"
else label
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "City")
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "State")
label <- label + this.AddFieldValue(label, row, "Zip")
printfn $"{label}"
printfn ""
member _.AddFieldValue(label: string, row: DataRow, fieldName: string) =
if DBNull.Value.Equals row[fieldName] |> not then
(string row[fieldName]) + " "
else
String.Empty
Private Sub OUtputLabels(dt As DataTable)
Dim label As String
' Iterate rows of table
For Each row As DataRow In dt.Rows
Dim labelLen As Integer
label = String.Empty
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Title")
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "FirstName")
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "MiddleInitial")
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "LastName")
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Suffix")
label += vbCrLf
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Address1")
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "AptNo")
label += vbCrLf
labelLen = Len(label)
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Address2")
If Len(label) <> labelLen Then label += vbCrLf
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "City")
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "State")
label += AddFieldValue(label, row, "Zip")
Console.WriteLine(label)
Console.WriteLine()
Next
End Sub
Private Function AddFieldValue(label As String, row As DataRow, _
fieldName As String) As String
If Not DbNull.Value.Equals(row.Item(fieldName)) Then
Return CStr(row.Item(fieldName)) & " "
Else
Return Nothing
End If
End Function
Remarks
DBNull is a singleton class, which means only this instance of this class can exist.
If a database field has missing data, you can use the DBNull.Value property to explicitly assign a DBNull object value to the field. However, most data providers do this automatically.
To evaluate database fields to determine whether their values are DBNull, you can pass the field value to the DBNull.Value.Equals
method. However, this method is rarely used because there are a number of other ways to evaluate a database field for missing data. These include the Visual Basic IsDBNull
function, the Convert.IsDBNull method, the DataTableReader.IsDBNull method, the IDataRecord.IsDBNull method, and several other methods.