# Optional Values A very common use case is values that may or may not be present. You could represent this case using enums like so: ```tomo enum MaybeInt(AnInt(x:Int), NoInt) func maybe_takes_int(maybe_x:MaybeInt): when maybe_x is AnInt(x): say("Got an int: $x") else: say("Got nothing") ``` However, it's overly onerous to have to define a separate type for each situation where you might want to not have a value. Instead, Tomo has built-in support for optional types: ``` func maybe_takes_int(x:Int?): if x: say("Got an int: $x") else: say("Got nothing") ``` This establishes a common language for talking about optional values without having to use a more generalized form of `enum` which may have different naming conventions and which would generate a lot of unnecessary code. In addition to using conditionals to check for null values, you can also use `or` to get a non-null value by either providing an alternative non-null value or by providing an early out statement like `return`/`skip`/`stop` or a function with an `Abort` type like `fail()` or `exit()`: ```tomo maybe_x := 5? >> maybe_x or -1 = 5 : Int >> maybe_x or fail("No value!") = 5 : Int maybe_x = !Int >> maybe_x or -1 = -1 : Int >> maybe_x or fail("No value!") # Failure! func do_stuff(matches:[Text]): pass for line in lines: matches := line:matches($/{..},{..}/) or skip # The `or skip` above means that if we're here, `matches` is non-null: do_stuff(matches) ```