I have a generic method defined like this:

public void MyMethod<T>(T myArgument)

The first thing I want to do is check if the value of myArgument is the default value for that type, something like this:

if (myArgument == default(T))

But this doesn’t compile because I haven’t guaranteed that T will implement the == operator. So I switched the code to this:

if (myArgument.Equals(default(T)))

Now this compiles, but will fail if myArgument is null, which is part of what I’m testing for. I can add an explicit null check like this:

if (myArgument == null || myArgument.Equals(default(T)))

Now this feels redundant to me. ReSharper is even suggesting that I change the myArgument == null part into myArgument == default(T) which is where I started. Is there a better way to solve this problem?

I need to support both references types and value types.

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