Question
Why is $null + @{}
valid, but @{} + $null
not; even where null is cast to a hashtable (@{} + ([hashtable]$null)
).
Example Code
[hashtable]$a = @{demo1=1;demo2='two'}
[hashtable]$b = @{demo3=3;demo4='Ivy'}
[hashtable]$c = $null
#combining 2 hashtables creates 1 with both hashes properties (would error if any properties were common to both)
write-verbose 'a + b' -Verbose
($a + $b)
#combining a null hashtable with a non-null hashtable works
write-verbose 'c + a' -Verbose
($c + $a)
#combing 2 null hashtables is fine; even if we've not explicitly cast null as a hashtable
write-verbose 'c + null' -Verbose
($c + $null)
#however, combinging a hashtable with null (i.e. same as second test, only putting null as the right argument instead of the left, produces an error
write-verbose 'a + c' -Verbose
($a + $c)
Output
Name Value
---- -----
demo3 3
demo4 Ivy
demo1 1
demo2 two
VERBOSE: c + a
demo1 1
demo2 two
VERBOSE: c + d
VERBOSE: a + c
A hash table can only be added to another hash table.
At line:19 char:1
+ ($a + $c)
+ ~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : InvalidOperation: (:) [], RuntimeException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : AddHashTableToNonHashTable
Side Note
Incidentally, this led me to discover this useful trick for a null-coalescing operation for hashtables: ($c + @{})
. e.g. ($a + ($c + @{}))
avoids the error produced above / (($a + @{}) + ($c + @{}))
gives us a completely safe way to add hashtables where either value may be null.