As others have already noted, they are called Object Initializers.
However, they are not constructors, and you shouldn't go around referring to them as such.
Consider the following code:
public class TestHarness
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Class1 class1 = new Class1();
class1.Foo = "foo";
Class2 class2 =
new Class2
{
Foo = "foo"
};
}
}
public class Class1
{
public string Foo { get; set; }
public string Bar { get; set; }
}
public class Class2
{
public string Foo { get; set; }
public string Bar { get; set; }
}
Look at the IL generated for the Main method:
.method private hidebysig static void Main(string[] args) cil managed
{
.maxstack 2
.locals init (
[0] class ClassLibrary1.Class1 class2,
[1] class ClassLibrary1.Class2 class3,
[2] class ClassLibrary1.Class2 class4)
L_0000: nop
L_0001: newobj instance void ClassLibrary1.Class1::.ctor()
L_0006: stloc.0
L_0007: ldloc.0
L_0008: ldstr "foo"
L_000d: callvirt instance void ClassLibrary1.Class1::set_Foo(string)
L_0012: nop
L_0013: newobj instance void ClassLibrary1.Class2::.ctor()
L_0018: stloc.2
L_0019: ldloc.2
L_001a: ldstr "foo"
L_001f: callvirt instance void ClassLibrary1.Class2::set_Foo(string)
L_0024: nop
L_0025: ldloc.2
L_0026: stloc.1
L_0027: ret
}
You can see that the compiler has generated code which sets the Foo property for both class1 and class2. It did not generate a constructor which takes and sets Foo. A minor point, but it's best to understand the difference.
new Customer { Name = "Bo" };