While implementing AutoMapper in some existing code, I came across the need to map to a nullable property. Other business logic relied on this particular long
being null instead of 0. The DTO has a property that contains a (long)Id, but the Entity contains the virtual property as well as a nullable long?
of the Id. Anyway after fumbling through a few tries, I finally came upon the solution and wanted to share it here.
In the MapperProfile for the direction of DTO to Entity you have to do a null check, but the trick for me was having to explicitly cast to (long?)null.
CreateMap<ExampleDto, ExampleEntity>().ForMember(ee => ee.ExampleId, options => options.MapFrom(ed => ed.ExampleProperty != null ? ed.ExampleProperty.ExampleId : (long?)null)).NoVirtualMap();
Hope someone else finds this helpful, and finds it here.
At first "glance", if you're looking to get into DevOps, then a deployment engineer should be a good match. I suppose it depends on the company and what they really want vs the job req description. As a Release Engineer, you would need to have (or get on the job) skills with CI/CD pipelines (build/release), branch management and release merging/tagging, and so on. Again, it depends what the company is really doing or wanting from that role.