C# Lambda expressions: Why should I use them?

Lambda expressions are a simpler syntax for anonymous delegates and can be used everywhere an anonymous delegate can be used. However, the opposite is not true; lambda expressions can be converted to expression trees which allows for a lot of the magic like LINQ to SQL.

The following is an example of a LINQ to Objects expression using anonymous delegates then lambda expressions to show how much easier on the eye they are:

// anonymous delegate
var evens = Enumerable
                .Range(1, 100)
                .Where(delegate(int x) { return (x % 2) == 0; })
                .ToList();

// lambda expression
var evens = Enumerable
                .Range(1, 100)
                .Where(x => (x % 2) == 0)
                .ToList();

Lambda expressions and anonymous delegates have an advantage over writing a separate function: they implement closures which can allow you to pass local state to the function without adding parameters to the function or creating one-time-use objects.

Expression trees are a very powerful new feature of C# 3.0 that allow an API to look at the structure of an expression instead of just getting a reference to a method that can be executed. An API just has to make a delegate parameter into an Expression<T> parameter and the compiler will generate an expression tree from a lambda instead of an anonymous delegate:

void Example(Predicate<int> aDelegate);

called like:

Example(x => x > 5);

becomes:

void Example(Expression<Predicate<int>> expressionTree);

The latter will get passed a representation of the abstract syntax tree that describes the expression x > 5. LINQ to SQL relies on this behavior to be able to turn C# expressions in to the SQL expressions desired for filtering / ordering / etc. on the server side.


Anonymous functions and expressions are useful for one-off methods that don't benefit from the extra work required to create a full method.

Consider this example:

 List<string> people = new List<string> { "name1", "name2", "joe", "another name", "etc" };
 string person = people.Find(person => person.Contains("Joe"));

versus

 public string FindPerson(string nameContains, List<string> persons)
 {
     foreach (string person in persons)
         if (person.Contains(nameContains))
             return person;
     return null;
 }

These are functionally equivalent.


I found them useful in a situation when I wanted to declare a handler for some control's event, using another control. To do it normally you would have to store controls' references in fields of the class so that you could use them in a different method than they were created.

private ComboBox combo;
private Label label;

public CreateControls()
{
    combo = new ComboBox();
    label = new Label();
    //some initializing code
    combo.SelectedIndexChanged += new EventHandler(combo_SelectedIndexChanged);
}

void combo_SelectedIndexChanged(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    label.Text = combo.SelectedValue;
}

thanks to lambda expressions you can use it like this:

public CreateControls()
{
    ComboBox combo = new ComboBox();
    Label label = new Label();
    //some initializing code
    combo.SelectedIndexChanged += (s, e) => {label.Text = combo.SelectedValue;};
}

Much easier.