--- id: grpc-optional-fields title: Optional Fields sidebar_label: Optional Fields --- A common issue with Protobufs is that the way that nil values are represented: a zero-valued primitive field isn't encoded into the binary representation, this means that applications cannot distinguish between zero and not-set for primitive fields. To support this, the Protobuf project supports some [Well-Known types](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/reference/google.protobuf) called "wrapper types". For example, the wrapper type for a `bool`, is called `google.protobuf.BoolValue` and is [defined as](https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/blob/991bcada050d7e9919503adef5b52547ec249d35/src/google/protobuf/wrappers.proto#L103-L107): ```protobuf title="ent/proto/entpb/entpb.proto" // Wrapper message for `bool`. // // The JSON representation for `BoolValue` is JSON `true` and `false`. message BoolValue { // The bool value. bool value = 1; } ``` When `entproto` generates a Protobuf message definition, it uses these wrapper types to represent "Optional" ent fields. Let's see this in action, modifying our ent schema to include an optional field: ```go title="ent/schema/user.go" {14-16} // Fields of the User. func (User) Fields() []ent.Field { return []ent.Field{ field.String("name"). Unique(). Annotations( entproto.Field(2), ), field.String("email_address"). Unique(). Annotations( entproto.Field(3), ), field.String("alias"). Optional(). Annotations(entproto.Field(4)), } } ``` Re-running `go generate ./...`, observe that our Protobuf definition for `User` now looks like: ```protobuf title="ent/proto/entpb/entpb.proto" {8} message User { int32 id = 1; string name = 2; string email_address = 3; google.protobuf.StringValue alias = 4; // <-- this is new repeated Category administered = 5; } ``` The generated service implementation also utilize this field. Observe in `entpb_user_service.go`: ```go title="ent/proto/entpb/entpb_user_service.go" {3-6} func (svc *UserService) createBuilder(user *User) (*ent.UserCreate, error) { m := svc.client.User.Create() if user.GetAlias() != nil { userAlias := user.GetAlias().GetValue() m.SetAlias(userAlias) } userEmailAddress := user.GetEmailAddress() m.SetEmailAddress(userEmailAddress) userName := user.GetName() m.SetName(userName) for _, item := range user.GetAdministered() { administered := int(item.GetId()) m.AddAdministeredIDs(administered) } return m, nil } ``` To use the wrapper types in our client code, we can use helper methods supplied by the [wrapperspb](https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf-go/blob/3f51f05e40d61e930a5416f1ed7092cef14cc058/types/known/wrapperspb/wrappers.pb.go#L458-L460) package to easily build instances of these types. For example in `cmd/client/main.go`: ```go {5} func randomUser() *entpb.User { return &entpb.User{ Name: fmt.Sprintf("user_%d", rand.Int()), EmailAddress: fmt.Sprintf("user_%d@example.com", rand.Int()), Alias: wrapperspb.String("John Doe"), } } ```