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Home/ Questions/Q 244947
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T21:02:52+00:00 2026-05-11T21:02:52+00:00

I thought the query was quite trivial, but it’s raising a FormatException (Input string

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I thought the query was quite trivial, but it’s raising a FormatException (“Input string was not in a correct format”) nonetheless:

Submissions.Where(s => (false && s.Status == Convert.ToInt16("")))

(of course, in my code, another expression that evaluates to ‘false’ is located before ‘&&’)

So why is the part after ‘&&’ evaluated, since the first part is always false and the total expression can never evaluate to true?

The situation is particularly strange because only the Convert.ToInt16("") part seems to raise an exception – other parts of my original query of more or less the same structure, like

Submissions.Where(s => (false && s.SubmissionDate <= DateTime.Now))

are evaluated correctly.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T21:02:52+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 9:02 pm

    As the others have pointed out, LINQ to SQL code gets pulled apart into an expression tree before being run as SQL code against the database. Since SQL does not necessarily follow the same short-circuit boolean rules as C#, the right side of your expression code might get parsed so that the SQL can be constructed.

    From MSDN:

    C# specifies short circuit semantics
    based on lexical order of operands for
    logical operators && and ||. SQL on
    the other hand is targeted for
    set-based queries and therefore
    provides more freedom for the
    optimizer to decide the order of
    execution.

    As for why you’re getting an exception with this code, Convert.ToInt16("") will always throw precisely that exception because there’s no way to convert an empty string into an integer. Your other example doesn’t attempt an invalid conversion, hence it runs without a problem.

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