Type Relationships in LINQ Query Operations (C#)
To write queries effectively, you should understand how types of the variables in a complete query operation all relate to each other. If you understand these relationships you will more easily comprehend the LINQ samples and code examples in the documentation. Furthermore, you will understand what occurs behind the scenes when variables are implicitly typed by using var.
LINQ query operations are strongly typed in the data source, in the query itself, and in the query execution. The type of the variables in the query must be compatible with the type of the elements in the data source and with the type of the iteration variable in the foreach statement. This strong typing guarantees that type errors are caught at compile time when they can be corrected before users encounter them.
In order to demonstrate these type relationships, most of the examples that follow use explicit typing for all variables. The last example shows how the same principles apply even when you use implicit typing by using var.
Queries that do not Transform the Source Data
The following illustration shows a LINQ to Objects query operation that performs no transformations on the data. The source contains a sequence of strings and the query output is also a sequence of strings.
The type argument of the data source determines the type of the range variable.
The type of the object that is selected determines the type of the query variable. Here name is a string. Therefore, the query variable is an IEnumerable<string>.
The query variable is iterated over in the foreach statement. Because the query variable is a sequence of strings, the iteration variable is also a string.
Queries that Transform the Source Data
The following illustration shows a LINQ to SQL query operation that performs a simple transformation on the data. The query takes a sequence of Customer objects as input, and selects only the Name property in the result. Because Name is a string, the query produces a sequence of strings as output.
The type argument of the data source determines the type of the range variable.
The select statement returns the Name property instead of the complete Customer object. Because Name is a string, the type argument of custNameQuery is string, not Customer.
Because custNameQuery is a sequence of strings, the foreach loop's iteration variable must also be a string.
The following illustration shows a slightly more complex transformation. The select statement returns an anonymous type that captures just two members of the original Customer object.
The type argument of the data source is always the type of the range variable in the query.
Because the select statement produces an anonymous type, the query variable must be implicitly typed by using var.
Because the type of the query variable is implicit, the iteration variable in the foreach loop must also be implicit.
Letting the compiler infer type information
Although you should understand the type relationships in a query operation, you do have the option to let the compiler do all the work for you. The keyword var can be used for any local variable in a query operation. The following illustration is exactly equivalent to example number 2 that was discussed earlier. The only difference is that the compiler will supply the strong type for each variable in the query operation:
For more information about var, see Implicitly Typed Local Variables (C# Programming Guide).
See Also
Concepts
Type Relationships in Query Operations (Visual Basic)