Is null an instance of anything?

No, there is no type which null is an instanceof.

15.20.2 Type Comparison Operator instanceof

RelationalExpression:
    RelationalExpression instanceof ReferenceType

At run time, the result of the instanceof operator is true if the value of the RelationalExpression is not null and the reference could be cast to the ReferenceType without raising a ClassCastException. Otherwise the result is false.

This means that for any type E and R, for any E o, where o == null, o instanceof R is always false.


What set does 'null' belong to?

JLS 4.1 The Kinds of Types and Values

There is also a special null type, the type of the expression null, which has no name. Because the null type has no name, it is impossible to declare a variable of the null type or to cast to the null type. The null reference is the only possible value of an expression of null type. The null reference can always be cast to any reference type. In practice, the programmer can ignore the null type and just pretend that null is merely a special literal that can be of any reference type.


What is null?

As the JLS quote above says, in practice you can simply pretend that it's "merely a special literal that can be of any reference type".

In Java, null == null (this isn't always the case in other languages). Note also that by contract, it also has this special property (from java.lang.Object):

public boolean equals(Object obj)

For any non-null reference value x, x.equals(null) should return false.

It is also the default value (for variables that have them) for all reference types:

JLS 4.12.5 Initial Values of Variables

  • Each class variable, instance variable, or array component is initialized with a default value when it is created:
    • For all reference types, the default value is null.

How this is used varies. You can use it to enable what is called lazy initialization of fields, where a field would have its initial value of null until it's actually used, where it's replaced by the "real" value (which may be expensive to compute).

There are also other uses. Let's take a real example from java.lang.System:

public static Console console()

Returns: The system console, if any, otherwise null.

This is a very common use pattern: null is used to denote non-existence of an object.

Here's another usage example, this time from java.io.BufferedReader:

public String readLine() throws IOException

Returns: A String containing the contents of the line, not including any line-termination characters, or null if the end of the stream has been reached.

So here, readLine() would return instanceof String for each line, until it finally returns a null to signify the end. This allows you to process each line as follows:

String line;
while ((line = reader.readLine()) != null) {
   process(line);
}

One can design the API so that the termination condition doesn't depend on readLine() returning null, but one can see that this design has the benefit of making things concise. Note that there is no problem with empty lines, because an empty line "" != null.

Let's take another example, this time from java.util.Map<K,V>:

V get(Object key)

Returns the value to which the specified key is mapped, or null if this map contains no mapping for the key.

If this map permits null values, then a return value of null does not necessarily indicate that the map contains no mapping for the key; it's also possible that the map explicitly maps the key to null. The containsKey operation may be used to distinguish these two cases.

Here we start to see how using null can complicate things. The first statement says that if the key isn't mapped, null is returned. The second statement says that even if the key is mapped, null can also be returned.

In contrast, java.util.Hashtable keeps things simpler by not permitting null keys and values; its V get(Object key), if returns null, unambiguously means that the key isn't mapped.

You can read through the rest of the APIs and find where and how null is used. Do keep in mind that they aren't always the best practice examples.

Generally speaking, null are used as a special value to signify:

  • Uninitialized state
  • Termination condition
  • Non-existing object
  • An unknown value

How is it represented in the memory?

In Java? None of your concern. And it's best kept that way.


Is null a good thing?

This is now borderline subjective. Some people say that null causes many programmer errors that could've been avoided. Some say that in a language that catches NullPointerException like Java, it's good to use it because you will fail-fast on programmer errors. Some people avoid null by using Null object pattern, etc.

This is a huge topic on its own, so it's best discussed as answer to another question.

I will end this with a quote from the inventor of null himself, C.A.R Hoare (of quicksort fame):

I call it my billion-dollar mistake. It was the invention of the null reference in 1965. At that time, I was designing the first comprehensive type system for references in an object oriented language (ALGOL W). My goal was to ensure that all use of references should be absolutely safe, with checking performed automatically by the compiler. But I couldn't resist the temptation to put in a null reference, simply because it was so easy to implement. This has led to innumerable errors, vulnerabilities, and system crashes, which have probably caused a billion dollars of pain and damage in the last forty years.

The video of this presentation goes deeper; it's a recommended watch.

Answer from polygenelubricants on Stack Overflow
🌐
Eclipse
help.eclipse.org › latest › topic › org.eclipse.jdt.doc.user › tasks › task-using_null_type_annotations.htm
Using null type annotations
In Java 7 and below the same syntax expressed a property of the corresponding variable and hence captured the nullness of the array itself. To express the same using Java-8 type annotations, viz. that the array itself can or cannot be null, the type annotation is placed before the square brackets denoting the array dimensions. This implies that the old syntax is still valid, but its meaning ...
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Eclipse
help.eclipse.org › latest › topic › org.eclipse.jdt.doc.user › tasks › task-using_null_annotations.htm
Using null annotations
The Eclipse Java compiler can be configured to use three distinct annotation types for its enhanced null analysis (which is disabled by default): ... @NonNullByDefault: types in method signatures and field declarations that lack a null annotation are regarded as non-null.
Discussions

java - What's the meaning about this square frame around the "null" in eclipse - Stack Overflow
I'm newbie in eclipse, what's this square frame around the "null" means. More on stackoverflow.com
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java - What does null mean? - Stack Overflow
As I understood null is instance of T for all reference type T. Question 1. What's defenition of null? How does null represents in memory? Consider the following case: We defined class public cl... More on stackoverflow.com
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What is Null?
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. More on reddit.com
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60
34
July 5, 2024
Different between null != variable vs variable!=null
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November 25, 2023
Top answer
1 of 14
331

Is null an instance of anything?

No, there is no type which null is an instanceof.

15.20.2 Type Comparison Operator instanceof

RelationalExpression:
    RelationalExpression instanceof ReferenceType

At run time, the result of the instanceof operator is true if the value of the RelationalExpression is not null and the reference could be cast to the ReferenceType without raising a ClassCastException. Otherwise the result is false.

This means that for any type E and R, for any E o, where o == null, o instanceof R is always false.


What set does 'null' belong to?

JLS 4.1 The Kinds of Types and Values

There is also a special null type, the type of the expression null, which has no name. Because the null type has no name, it is impossible to declare a variable of the null type or to cast to the null type. The null reference is the only possible value of an expression of null type. The null reference can always be cast to any reference type. In practice, the programmer can ignore the null type and just pretend that null is merely a special literal that can be of any reference type.


What is null?

As the JLS quote above says, in practice you can simply pretend that it's "merely a special literal that can be of any reference type".

In Java, null == null (this isn't always the case in other languages). Note also that by contract, it also has this special property (from java.lang.Object):

public boolean equals(Object obj)

For any non-null reference value x, x.equals(null) should return false.

It is also the default value (for variables that have them) for all reference types:

JLS 4.12.5 Initial Values of Variables

  • Each class variable, instance variable, or array component is initialized with a default value when it is created:
    • For all reference types, the default value is null.

How this is used varies. You can use it to enable what is called lazy initialization of fields, where a field would have its initial value of null until it's actually used, where it's replaced by the "real" value (which may be expensive to compute).

There are also other uses. Let's take a real example from java.lang.System:

public static Console console()

Returns: The system console, if any, otherwise null.

This is a very common use pattern: null is used to denote non-existence of an object.

Here's another usage example, this time from java.io.BufferedReader:

public String readLine() throws IOException

Returns: A String containing the contents of the line, not including any line-termination characters, or null if the end of the stream has been reached.

So here, readLine() would return instanceof String for each line, until it finally returns a null to signify the end. This allows you to process each line as follows:

String line;
while ((line = reader.readLine()) != null) {
   process(line);
}

One can design the API so that the termination condition doesn't depend on readLine() returning null, but one can see that this design has the benefit of making things concise. Note that there is no problem with empty lines, because an empty line "" != null.

Let's take another example, this time from java.util.Map<K,V>:

V get(Object key)

Returns the value to which the specified key is mapped, or null if this map contains no mapping for the key.

If this map permits null values, then a return value of null does not necessarily indicate that the map contains no mapping for the key; it's also possible that the map explicitly maps the key to null. The containsKey operation may be used to distinguish these two cases.

Here we start to see how using null can complicate things. The first statement says that if the key isn't mapped, null is returned. The second statement says that even if the key is mapped, null can also be returned.

In contrast, java.util.Hashtable keeps things simpler by not permitting null keys and values; its V get(Object key), if returns null, unambiguously means that the key isn't mapped.

You can read through the rest of the APIs and find where and how null is used. Do keep in mind that they aren't always the best practice examples.

Generally speaking, null are used as a special value to signify:

  • Uninitialized state
  • Termination condition
  • Non-existing object
  • An unknown value

How is it represented in the memory?

In Java? None of your concern. And it's best kept that way.


Is null a good thing?

This is now borderline subjective. Some people say that null causes many programmer errors that could've been avoided. Some say that in a language that catches NullPointerException like Java, it's good to use it because you will fail-fast on programmer errors. Some people avoid null by using Null object pattern, etc.

This is a huge topic on its own, so it's best discussed as answer to another question.

I will end this with a quote from the inventor of null himself, C.A.R Hoare (of quicksort fame):

I call it my billion-dollar mistake. It was the invention of the null reference in 1965. At that time, I was designing the first comprehensive type system for references in an object oriented language (ALGOL W). My goal was to ensure that all use of references should be absolutely safe, with checking performed automatically by the compiler. But I couldn't resist the temptation to put in a null reference, simply because it was so easy to implement. This has led to innumerable errors, vulnerabilities, and system crashes, which have probably caused a billion dollars of pain and damage in the last forty years.

The video of this presentation goes deeper; it's a recommended watch.

2 of 14
33

Is null an instance of anything?

No. That is why null instanceof X will return false for all classes X. (Don't be fooled by the fact that you can assign null to a variable whose type is an object type. Strictly speaking, the assignment involves an implicit type conversion; see below.)

What set does 'null' belong to?

It is the one and only member of the null type, where the null type is defined as follows:

"There is also a special null type, the type of the expression null, which has no name. Because the null type has no name, it is impossible to declare a variable of the null type or to cast to the null type. The null reference is the only possible value of an expression of null type. The null reference can always be cast to any reference type. In practice, the programmer can ignore the null type and just pretend that null is merely a special literal that can be of any reference type." JLS 4.1

What is null?

See above. In some contexts, null is used to denote "no object" or "unknown" or "unavailable", but these meanings are application specific.

How is it represented in the memory?

That is implementation specific, and you won't be able to see the representation of null in a pure Java program. (But null is represented as a zero machine address / pointer in most if not all Java implementations.)

🌐
Upwork
upwork.com › resources › articles › null in java: understanding the basics
Null in Java: Understanding the Basics - Upwork
August 5, 2024 - Java's creators included null to provide a standard way to represent the absence of a value in object-oriented programming. The intention was to give developers a straightforward mechanism to check if an object reference was pointing to any valid memory location before accessing it. Null was meant to simplify error checking and improve code robustness by clearly indicating uninitialized or absent values.
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Coderanch
coderanch.com › t › 688734 › java › null
what does null mean? (Beginning Java forum at Coderanch)
December 24, 2017 - If a reference variable has a value of null, it means that it is not referring to any object/instance. Internally, of course, null has a value -- everything with a state (ie. including pointing to nothing) has a value... Henry · Books: Java Threads, 3rd Edition, Jini in a Nutshell, and Java ...
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DataCamp
datacamp.com › doc › java › null
null Keyword in Java: Usage & Examples
Java keywordsIntroduction To JavaJava File HandlingJava Language BasicsJava ArraysJava Object-Oriented Programming ... The null keyword in Java is a literal that represents a null reference, one that points to no object.
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Medium
medium.com › @dilhan9g › understanding-null-in-java-what-it-is-and-when-to-use-it-4a87dabb5f36
Understanding null in Java: What It Is and When to Use It | by Suresh Dilhan | Medium
May 19, 2025 - In Java, null is a special literal that represents the absence of a value for reference types. When you assign null to a variable, you’re saying, “This variable doesn’t point to any object in memory.” ... It’s important to note that ...
Find elsewhere
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Logit
logit.io › blog › post › null-in-java
The Concept Of Null In Java
February 4, 2025 - Null is a reserved word (keyword) in Java for literal values. It is a literal similar to the true and false. In Java, null is a keyword much like the other keywords public, static or final.
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › java › interesting-facts-about-null-in-java
Interesting facts about null in Java - GeeksforGeeks
September 3, 2024 - The null value is not the same as an empty string or an empty array. An empty string is a string that contains no characters, while an empty array is an array that contains no elements. The Java programming language has a built-in null type, called "null", which is a subtype of all reference types.
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DEV Community
dev.to › dj_devjournal › understanding-null-in-java-4o31
Understanding null in Java - DEV Community
October 16, 2019 - The output of the above code snippet is shown in Figure 1 shown below. Figure 1: OUTPUT of the code snippet written above. In Java, null is a reserved word (keyword) for literal values.
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Medium
donraab.medium.com › what-if-null-was-an-object-in-java-3f1974954be2
What if null was an Object in Java? - Donald Raab - Medium
January 5, 2024 - In this blog, I will demonstrate and explain how Java and Smalltalk deal with absent values, referred to as null in Java, and nil in Smalltalk. This blog will not provide a full explanation of Java or Smalltalk syntax. There are resources available on the internet for both if you want to learn more.
Top answer
1 of 4
11

null is actually not instanceof anything!

The instanceof operator from the Java Language Specification (§15.20.2):

At run time, the result of the instanceof operator is true if the value of the RelationalExpression is not null and the reference could be cast (§15.16) to the ReferenceType without raising a ClassCastException. Otherwise the result is false.

4.1. The Kinds of Types and Values

There are two kinds of types in the Java programming language: primitive types (§4.2) and reference types (§4.3). There are, correspondingly, two kinds of data values that can be stored in variables, passed as arguments, returned by methods, and operated on: primitive values (§4.2) and reference values (§4.3).

Type: PrimitiveType ReferenceType There is also a special null type, the type of the expression null (§3.10.7, §15.8.1), which has no name.

Because the null type has no name, it is impossible to declare a variable of the null type or to cast to the null type.

The null reference is the only possible value of an expression of null type.

The null reference can always undergo a widening reference conversion to any reference type.

In practice, the programmer can ignore the null type and just pretend that null is merely a special literal that can be of any reference type.

2 of 4
10

Formally, null is a singleton member of the null type, which is defined to be the subtype of every other Java type.

null is a reference type and its value is the only reference value which doesn't refer to any object. Therefore there is no representation of null in memory. The binary value of a reference-typed variable whose value is null is simply zero (all zero bits). Even though this is not explicitly specified, it follows from the general initialization semantics of objects and any other value would cause major problems to an implementation.

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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 - The Java Virtual Machine specification does not mandate a concrete value encoding null. ... If a reference points to null, it simply means that there is no value associated with it.
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Medium
medium.com › @mbanaee61 › mastering-null-in-java-55f20d4289da
Mastering 'null' in Java. Introduction | by Mahad | Medium
July 4, 2025 - Mastering 'null' in Java Introduction In Java, null is a literal used to represent no value it means a reference variable is not pointing to any object. While simple, improper handling of null is the …
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Baeldung
baeldung.com › home › java › what is the null type in java?
What Is the null Type in Java? | Baeldung
January 8, 2024 - In the world of Java, the null type is pervasive, and it’s hard to use the language without encountering it. In most cases, the intuitive understanding that it represents nothingness or lack of something suffices to program effectively.
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Codemia
codemia.io › knowledge-hub › path › what_is_null_in_java
What is null in Java?
Enhance your system design skills with over 120 practice problems, detailed solutions, and hands-on exercises
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SAS
support.sas.com › rnd › itech › doc9 › dev_guide › dist-obj › javaclnt › javaprog › javastub › nullref.html
Null References
In Java programming, null can be assigned to any variable of a reference type (that is, a non-primitive type) to indicate that the variable does not refer to any object or array. CORBA also allows null object references, but it is important to note that not all Java reference types map to CORBA ...
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Scaler
scaler.com › home › topics › what is java null?
What is Java Null? - Scaler Topics
December 14, 2022 - Null is the default value for reference types, just as there is a default value for basic types (e.g., 0 for integers, false for booleans). Uninitialized reference variables, such as instance variables and static variables, default to null.
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DataFlair
data-flair.training › blogs › java-null
Java Null - 7 Unknown Facts about Null in Java - DataFlair
May 2, 2024 - These have individual meaning. All reference variables have null as their default value. The compiler is unable to unbox null objects. It throws a NullPointerException. Null is not an instance of any class. Hence a null value will return false if used with the instanceOf operator. Static methods are callable with a reference of the null type. You cannot call non-static methods with a reference of the null type. You can use == and != comparisons with null types in Java.