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Home/ Questions/Q 8622655
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 12, 20262026-06-12T07:06:38+00:00 2026-06-12T07:06:38+00:00

I see some code like this: textBox.TextChanged += (s, e) => this.Foo(); but I

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I see some code like this:

textBox.TextChanged += (s, e) => this.Foo();

but I don’t know what are “s” and “e” ? what is the topic I should study in C# for this line of code?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-12T07:06:39+00:00Added an answer on June 12, 2026 at 7:06 am

    They are the parameters of the lambda-function.

    The compiler infers their types from the context, but it is allowed to write a longer (more informative) form:

     textBox.TextChanged += (object s, EventArgs e) => { this.Foo(); };
    

    In this notation it is easier to see that they are method parameters.
    On the other side of => is the method body.


    In response to comment:

    Now is there a way to also rewrite the same lambda expression I have in a simpler C# syntax?

    Yes, you can always use the classic notation. And while that may not be ‘better’ or even ‘simpler’ it is easier to understand when you are learning this.

    // The setup method
    void MyMethod()
    {
       //textBox.TextChanged += new Eventhandler(MyTextChangedHandler);  // C#1 and later
       textBox.TextChanged += MyTextChangedHandler;                      // C#2 and later
    }
    
    // The subscribed method. The lambda is an inline version of this. 
    private void MyTextChangedHandler(object s, EventArgs e)
    { 
       this.Foo(); 
    }
    
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