Is there any specific reason why there is no empty char literal?
What comes closest to what I think of, the '' is the '\0' the null character.
In C++ the char is represented by an int, which means empty char goes directly to the 0 integer value, which is in C++ "the same as null".
The practical part of coming up with that question:
In a class I want to represent char values as enum attributes.
Unbiased I tried to initialize an instance with '', which of course does not work.
But shouldn't be there a char null value? Not to be confused with string.Empty, 
more in the nature of a null reference.
So the question is: Why is there no empty char?
-edit-
Seeing this question the question can be enhanced on: An empty char value would enable concatening strings and chars without destroying the string. Would that not be preferable? Or should this "just work as expected"?
 
     
     
    