This was intended as a meme but is actually a good representation of what "Null" is. In C#, when you declare string s = "My shit"; it means that "s" is a reference to a memory location that holds the data "My shit". string s = null; means that the reference "s" exists but it's not pointing to any object, as in it holds nothing. Answer from abd53 on reddit.com
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Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › dictionary › null
NULL Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
: to make null · Let’s be honest: null is kind of a nothing word. That’s not a judgment—it was literally borrowed into English from the Anglo-French word nul, meaning "not any." That word, in turn, traces to the Latin word nullus, from ne-, meaning "not," and ullus, meaning "any."
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Dictionary.com
dictionary.com › browse › null
NULL Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com
to cancel; make null. null and void, without legal force or effect; not valid. This contract is null and void. null British · / nʌl / without legal force; invalid; (esp in the phrase null and void ) without value or consequence; useless · lacking distinction; characterless ·
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YourDictionary
yourdictionary.com › home › dictionary meanings › null definition
Null Definition & Meaning | YourDictionary
A null result. ... Of or relating to a set having no members or to zero magnitude. ... A non-existent or empty value or set of values. ... An instrument reading of zero. ... Zero; nothing. ... Something that has no force or meaning. ... (computing) The ASCII or Unicode character (␀), represented by a zero value, that indicates no character and is sometimes used as a string terminator. ... To make null.
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Vocabulary.com
vocabulary.com › dictionary › null
Null - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com
Maybe being "null and void," which is a legal term making something really, really null. Null is the base of the word nullify, which means to make something invalid or to cancel something out.
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TheFreeDictionary.com
thefreedictionary.com › null
Null - definition of null by The Free Dictionary
Define null. null synonyms, null pronunciation, null translation, English dictionary definition of null. adj. 1. Having no legal force; invalid: render a contract null and void. 2. Of no consequence, effect, or value; insignificant.
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freeCodeCamp
freecodecamp.org › news › a-quick-and-thorough-guide-to-null-what-it-is-and-how-you-should-use-it-d170cea62840
A quick and thorough guide to ‘null’: what it is, and how you should use it
June 12, 2018 - In most cases, null has a more specific meaning that depends on the context. If we need to know why there is no value associated with a reference, then additional data must be provided to differentiate the possible cases. Allow null only if it makes sense for an object reference to have 'no value associated with it'.
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Collins Dictionary
collinsdictionary.com › dictionary › english › null
NULL definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
6 meanings: 1. without legal force; invalid; (esp in the phrase null and void) 2. without value or consequence; useless 3..... Click for more definitions.
Find elsewhere
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Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › dictionary › english › null
NULL | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
NULL definition: 1. having no legal force: 2. with no value or effect: 3. (of a set or matrix) containing nothing…. Learn more.
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LSD.Law
lsd.law › home › legal definitions
What is null? Simple Definition & Meaning · LSD.Law
November 17, 2025 - In legal terms, null describes something that has no legal validity or binding force. It means that, in the eyes of the law, the action, document, or agreement never truly existed or had any legal effect from its inception.
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Null
Null - Wikipedia
2 weeks ago - Look up Null, null, a-null, núll, or Nullus in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... Null (SQL) (or NULL), a special marker and keyword in SQL indicating that a data value does not exist, is not known, or is missing. Null character, the zero-valued ASCII character, also designated by NUL, often ...
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Rocket Lawyer
rocketlawyer.com › business-and-contracts › business-operations › contract-management › legal-guide › what-makes-a-contract-null-and-void
What Makes a Contract Null and Void? - Rocket Lawyer
August 17, 2023 - A null and void contract is considered dead on arrival because it was never valid. By contrast, a voidable contract may be deemed valid if both parties agree to proceed. For example, Janelle offers to buy Eric's autographed poster of Prince, but upon closer inspection, both she and Eric realize that the autograph is not Prince's, but Sheila E's.
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Etymonline
etymonline.com › word › null
Null - Etymology, Origin & Meaning
... "no thing, not any thing, not something," Middle English, from Old English naþing, naðinc, from nan "not one" (see none) + þing "thing" (see thing). Meaning "insignificant thing, thing of no consequence" is from c.
Top answer
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TL;DR

The key to understanding what null! means is understanding the ! operator. You may have used it before as the "not" operator. However, since C# 8.0 and its new "nullable-reference-types" feature, the operator got a second meaning. It can be used on a type to control Nullability, it is then called the "Null Forgiving Operator".

Basically, null! applies the ! operator to the value null. This overrides the nullability of the value null to non-nullable, telling the compiler that null is a "non-null" type.


Typical usage

Assuming this definition:

class Person
{
    // Not every person has a middle name. We express "no middle name" as "null"
    public string? MiddleName;
}

The usage would be:

void LogPerson(Person person)
{
    Console.WriteLine(person.MiddleName.Length);  // WARNING: may be null
    Console.WriteLine(person.MiddleName!.Length); // No warning
}

This operator basically turns off the compiler null checks for this usage.

Technical Explanation

The groundwork that you will need to understand what null! means.

Null Safety

C# 8.0 tries to help you manage your null-values. Instead of allowing you to assign null to everything by default, they have flipped things around and now require you to explicitly mark everything you want to be able to hold a null value.

This is a super useful feature, it allows you to avoid NullReferenceExceptions by forcing you to make a decision and enforcing it.

How it works

There are 2 states a variable can be in - when talking about null-safety.

  • Nullable - Can be null.
  • Non-Nullable - Cannot be null.

Since C# 8.0 all reference types are non-nullable by default. Value types have been non-nullable since C# 2.0!

The "nullability" can be modified by 2 new (type-level) operators:

  • ! = from Nullable to Non-Nullable
  • ? = from Non-Nullable to Nullable

These operators are counterparts to one another. The Compiler uses the information that you define with these operators to ensure null-safety.

Examples

? Operator usage.

This operator tells the compiler that a variable can hold a null value. It is used when defining variables.

  • Nullable string? x;

    • x is a reference type - So by default non-nullable.
    • We apply the ? operator - which makes it nullable.
    • x = null Works fine.
  • Non-Nullable string y;

    • y is a reference type - So by default non-nullable.
    • y = null Generates a warning since you assign a null value to something that is not supposed to be null.

Nice to know: Using object? is basically just syntactic sugar for System.Nullable<object>

! Operator usage.

This operator tells the compiler that something that could be null, is safe to be accessed. You express the intent to "not care" about null safety in this instance. It is used when accessing variables.

string x;
string? y;
  • x = y
    • Illegal! Warning: "y" may be null
    • The left side of the assignment is non-nullable but the right side is nullable.
    • So it does not work, since it is semantically incorrect
  • x = y!
    • Legal!
    • y is a reference type with the ? type modifier applied so it is nullable if not proven otherwise.
    • We apply ! to y which overrides its nullability settings to make it non-nullable
    • The right and left side of the assignment are non-nullable. Which is semantically correct.

WARNING The ! operator only turns off the compiler-checks at a type-system level - At runtime, the value may still be null.

Use carefully!

You should try to avoid using the Null-Forgiving-Operator, usage may be the symptom of a design flaw in your system since it negates the effects of null-safety you get guaranteed by the compiler.

Reasoning

Using the ! operator will create very hard to find bugs. If you have a property that is marked non-nullable, you will assume you can use it safely. But at runtime, you suddenly run into a NullReferenceException and scratch your head. Since a value actually became null after bypassing the compiler-checks with !.

Why does this operator exist then?

There are valid use-cases (outlined in detail below) where usage is appropriate. However, in 99% of the cases, you are better off with an alternative solution. Please do not slap dozens of !'s in your code, just to silence the warnings.

  • In some (edge) cases, the compiler is not able to detect that a nullable value is actually non-nullable.
  • Easier legacy code-base migration.
  • In some cases, you just don't care if something becomes null.
  • When working with Unit-tests you may want to check the behavior of code when a null comes through.

Ok!? But what does null! mean?

It tells the compiler that null is not a nullable value. Sounds weird, doesn't it?

It is the same as y! from the example above. It only looks weird since you apply the operator to the null literal. But the concept is the same. In this case, the null literal is the same as any other expression/type/value/variable.

The null literal type is the only type that is nullable by default! But as we learned, the nullability of any type can be overridden with ! to non-nullable.

The type system does not care about the actual/runtime value of a variable. Only its compile-time type and in your example the variable you want to assign to LastName (null!) is non-nullable, which is valid as far as the type-system is concerned.

Consider this (invalid) piece of code.

object? null;
LastName = null!;
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null! is used to assign null to non-nullable variables, which is a way of promising that the variable won't be null when it is actually used.

I'd use null! in a Visual Studio extension, where properties are initialized by MEF via reflection:

[Import] // Set by MEF
VSImports vs = null!;
[Import] // Set by MEF
IClassificationTypeRegistryService classificationRegistry = null!; 

(I hate how variables magically get values in this system, but it is what it is.)

I also use it in unit tests to mark variables initialized by a setup method:

public class MyUnitTests
{
    IDatabaseRepository _repo = null!;

    [OneTimeSetUp]
    public void PrepareTestDatabase()
    {
        ...
        _repo = ...
        ...
    }
}

If you don't use null! in such cases, you'll have to use an exclamation mark every single time you read the variable, which would be a hassle without benefit.

Note: cases where null! is a good idea are fairly rare. I treat it as somewhat of a last resort.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/discordapp › what does “null” mean and why is it here
r/discordapp on Reddit: What does “null” mean and why is it here
March 21, 2023 - AKA, null literally means it is trying to find a variable that does not exist. But what if you do want a variable, but nothing inside it? Well, make it be undefined!
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Thesaurus.com
thesaurus.com › browse › make null and void
MAKE NULL AND VOID Synonyms & Antonyms - 46 words | Thesaurus.com
alter annul bend to one's will control countermand direct disallow disregard dominate govern ignore influence invalidate make void not heed nullify outvote outweigh overturn prevail over quash recall repeal rescind revoke ride roughshod rule against set aside supersede sway take no account of thwart trample upset vanquish veto
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Oxford English Dictionary
oed.com › dictionary › null_adj
null, adj. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
There are 13 meanings listed in OED's entry for the adjective null, one of which is labelled obsolete.
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Thesaurus.com
thesaurus.com › browse › null
NULL Synonyms & Antonyms - 38 words | Thesaurus.com
absent characterless inefficacious nonexistent null and void powerless unavailing unsanctioned useless vain
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WordHippo
wordhippo.com › what-is › another-word-for › make_null_and_void.html
What is another word for "make null and void"?
Synonyms for make null and void include overrule, cancel, annul, nullify, repeal, rescind, revoke, quash, invalidate and negate. Find more similar words at wordhippo.com!