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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T12:35:29+00:00 2026-05-13T12:35:29+00:00

I know what this code is doing but I’m not sure on the syntax.

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I know what this code is doing but I’m not sure on the syntax. It doesn’t seem to conform to a “standard” format. Is it mostly LINQ?

return db.Subjects.SingleOrDefault(s => s.ID == ID);

The first part makes sense but it’s the part in the brackets I don’t understand. How can we use s without declaring it? And how are we putting logic into a method call?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T12:35:29+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:35 pm

    The first part makes sense but it’s the part in the brackets I don’t understand.

    What are you seeing here is a lambda expression. It’s a very special anonymous delegate.

    Is it mostly LINQ?

    Enumerable.SingleOrDefault is a LINQ method, but the lambdas are something independent of LINQ; they just make LINQ incredibly more friendly then it otherwise would be.

    Now, to get specific IEnumerable<Subject>.SingleOrDefault(s => s.ID == ID) returns the unique instance of Subject in the IEnumerable<Subject> that matches the predicate s => s.ID == ID or it returns null if there is no such instance. It throws an exception if there is more than one such instance. At compile-time s => s.ID == ID is translated into a full-blown delegate the eats objects of type Subject and returns a bool that is true if and only if s.ID is equal to ID.

    How can we use s without declaring it?

    The => is the lambda operator. It basically separates the left-hand side of the lambda expression from the right-hand side. The left-hand side are the input variables. It’s equivalent to the parameter list in an explicitly-defined method. That is s in the lambda expression plays the role of s below:

    public bool Predicate(Subject s)
    

    It’s just that you don’t have to declare the type of s as the compiler will infer it.

    The right-hand side the lambda body. It’s equivalent to the body below

    public bool Predicate(Subject s) {
        return s.ID == ID;
    }
    

    What is more, you don’t have to declare the return type; the compiler will infer that to.

    So, in the end it is as if you did the following:

    class MyPredicate {
        public string ID;
        public bool Predicate(Subject s) {
            return s.ID == this.ID;
        }
    }
    

    Then:

    // elements is IEnumerable<Subject>
    // ID is string
    MyPredicate predicate = new MyPredicate();
    predicate.ID = ID;
    elements.SingleOrDefault(predicate.Predicate);
    

    The nice thing is the compiler just automatically spits this out for you when you use a lambda expression.

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