You can check nullability with isMarkedNullable
. The following code:
class MyClass(val nullable: Long?, val notNullable: MyClass)
MyClass::class.declaredMemberProperties.forEach {
println("Property $it isMarkedNullable=${it.returnType.isMarkedNullable}")
}
will print:
Property val MyClass.notNullable: stack.MyClass isMarkedNullable=false
Property val MyClass.nullable: kotlin.Long? isMarkedNullable=true
Excerpt from documentation (emphasis mine):
For Kotlin types, it means that null value is allowed to be
represented by this type. In practice it means that the type was
declared with a question mark at the end. For non-Kotlin types, it
means the type or the symbol which was declared with this type is
annotated with a runtime-retained nullability annotation such as
javax.annotation.Nullable.
Note that even if isMarkedNullable
is false, values of the type can
still be null
. This may happen if it is a type of the type parameter
with a nullable upper bound:
fun <T> foo(t: T) {
// isMarkedNullable == false for t's type, but t can be null here
}