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Home/ Questions/Q 591445
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T15:38:07+00:00 2026-05-13T15:38:07+00:00

I recently noticed the following code which basically defines a class method public Func<string,

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I recently noticed the following code which basically defines a class method

public Func<string, string> SampleMethod = inputParam =>
{
    return inputParam.ToUpper();
};

which is the same as doing it in the old fashioned way

public string SampleMethod(string inputParam ) 
{
    return inputParam.ToUpper();
}

My question – why would I prefer the first over the second? My eyes are maybe more trained to understand the second style quicker. I find it similar to the difference between SMS lingo and plain old english.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T15:38:08+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 3:38 pm

    Those two things are fundamentally different. The former is a field of a delegate type while the latter is really a method. The tiniest difference I can think of is that you can modify the first one dynamically at runtime and assign another method reference to it while the second is fixed.

    You shouldn’t normally prefer the first over the second if your purpose is to write a simple method for a class in C#.

    An example that makes the first extremely fragile:

    var c = new SomeClass();
    c.SampleMethod = inputParam => inputParam.ToLower();
    c.DoSomeTaskThatReliesOnSampleMethodReturningAnUpperCaseString();
    c.SampleMethod = null;
    c.DoSomeTaskThatCallsSampleMethod(); // NullReferenceException
    

    This style of programming is common in language like Javascript where an object is fundamentally a dynamic creature built upon a simple dictionary.

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