LINQ - Does the Where expression return new instance or reference to object instance
The instances are the same if they are classes, but copies if they are structs/value types.
int, byte and double are value types, as are structs (like System.Drawing.Point
and self-defined structs).
But strings, all of your own classes, basically "the rest", are reference types.
Note: LINQ uses the same rules as all other assignments.
For objects:
Person p1 = new Person();
p1.Name = "Mr Jones";
Person p2 = p1;
p2.Name = "Mr Anderssen";
// Now p1.Name is also "Mr Anderssen"
For structs:
Point p1 = new Point();
p1.x = 5;
Point p2 = p1;
p2.x = 10;
// p1.x is still 5
The same rules apply when using LINQ.
Actually it depends on the collection. In some cases, LINQ methods can return cloned objects instead of references to originals. Take a look at this test:
[Test]
public void Test_weird_linq()
{
var names = new[]{ "Fred", "Roman" };
var list = names.Select(x => new MyClass() { Name = x });
list.First().Name = "Craig";
Assert.AreEqual("Craig", list.First().Name);
}
public class MyClass
{
public string Name { get; set; }
}
This test will fail, even though many people believe that the same object will be returned by list.First()
. It will work if you use another collection "modified with ToList()
".
var list = names.Select(x => new MyClass() { Name = x }).ToList();
I don't know for sure why it works this way, but it's something to have in mind when you write your code :)
This question can help you understand how LINQ works internally.