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I'm having a devil of a time finding a comparison of the different ways to query for a single item, and when to use each.

Does anyone have a link that compares all these, or a quick explanation as to why you would use one over the other? Are there still more operators that I am unaware of?

Thank you.

6 Answers 6

234

Here is an overview of the different methods:

  • Find() - when you want to get an item by primary key. This will return null if it can't find an item. It will look in the context before going to the database (as pointed out by Yaron in the comments) which can be an important efficiency factor if you need to get the same entity multiple times while the same context is alive.

  • Single() - when you expect exactly one item to be returned by a query. This will throw an exception if the query does not return exactly one item.

  • SingleOrDefault() - when you expect zero or one items to be returned by a query (i.e. you are not sure if an item with a given key exists). This will throw an exception if the query does not return zero or one items.

  • First() - when you expect one or more items to be returned by a query but you only want to access the first item in your code (ordering could be important in the query here). This will throw an exception if the query does not return at least one item.

  • FirstOrDefault() - when you expect zero or more items to be returned by a query but you only want to access the first item in your code (i.e. you are not sure if an item with a given key exists)

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  • 1
    It depends on the scenario. If you know you should always get a single record back from the db, no more, no less, for a given query then Single() is the 'right' one to use. In other situations the others may be more appropriate. In previous versions of EF we were limited to First() and FirstOrDefault() which work for scenarios where you are expecting a single record but they won't warn you if you actually get more than that single record back which could be important depending on the situation. Aug 14, 2010 at 22:47
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    Thanks. I can't see myself needing First() anymore, where Single() wouldn't be better. If I were less dense, I'm sure I could appreciate/understand when to use First() still.
    – asfsadf
    Aug 14, 2010 at 22:57
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    First() makes most sense in the case where you want to retrieve only the object with the highest or lowest of what you are ordering by. For instance, find me the sale with the highest total value. Sales.OrderByDescending(s => s.TotalValue).First(); Jun 15, 2011 at 17:12
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    All the comments over look an important difference. Find() is the only method that searches the context before hitting the db.
    – Yaron Levi
    Oct 8, 2013 at 21:28
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    Another point is when querying a sql database, Single or SingleOrDefault will query for 2 records (limit 2) while First or FirstOrDefault will query for 1 (limit 1). Mar 14, 2015 at 4:08
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I always tend to use FirstOrDefault. If you really want to be picky with performance then you should use FirstOrDefault in EF. Under the covers SingleOrDefault uses top (2) in the query because, it needs to check if there is a second row that matches the criteria and if it does, it throws an exception. Basically in SingleOrDefault you are saying that you want to throw an exception if your query returns more then 1 record.

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    Have you ever measured the performance difference between FirstOrDefault and SingleOrDefault to be significant? I'd say it's premature optimization in most cases.
    – Steven
    Nov 6, 2013 at 21:41
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    I tend to use Single() or SingleOrDefault() when I return something of which there should only exist one. The reason I do so is to spot bugs by making badly written queries, which return more than they should, fail. At least in my mind, this will help keeping the data in the system consistent. Of course this is slower, but I would guess that it is not much slower, and I'm willing to pay that price.
    – mortb
    Oct 4, 2019 at 12:36
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It's really very simple: Single returns a single item and throw an exception if there is either none or more than one item. First will return the first item or throw when there is no item. FirstOrDefault will return the first item or return the default value (which is null in case the given type is a reference type) when there is no item.

This is the behavior the API is supposed to have. Note however that the underlying implementation could have a different behavior. While Entity Framework obeys this, a O/RM like LLBLGen can also return null when calling First which is a very strange thing. This was a very strange (and stubborn) decision by the designer IMO.

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  • Thanks Steven. I guess I'm still wondering why you'd use one over the other? I've always used FirstOrDefault(), and was curious as to why a lot of the new examples I've seen have switched to Single(). Is there a reason to switch to Single()? Are there others that also accomplish the same thing, that I should consider instead?
    – asfsadf
    Aug 14, 2010 at 22:26
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    If you like your code to "fail fast", First() and Single() let your code more precisely say what is expected (so it can fail otherwise) Aug 14, 2010 at 22:38
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    I totally agree with Frank. It’s also about communicating intent. Single expresses clearly that you only expect the result to have one element.
    – Steven
    Aug 15, 2010 at 9:19
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The four methods each have their place; Though you really only have two different operations.

  • First - Expecting a result set that contains multiple items, give me the first item in that set.
  • Single - Expecting a single result back, give me that item.

The xxxxOrDefault() version just adds on "I don't want to consider an empty result set to be an exceptional circumstance."

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  • OK, so it seems to me that First() would rarely come in handy. I'm having a hard time coming up with a scenario where Single() wouldn't be the first option. You have a quick one off hand, by chance? Thanks.
    – asfsadf
    Aug 14, 2010 at 22:40
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    Unfortunately a lot of developers use First() or FirstOrDefault() purely as a defensive measure, thinking it will avoid an exception when it really just has the potential to hide real problems.
    – Matt H
    Aug 14, 2010 at 23:33
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On the other side, you can divide these methods by the core logic, like this:

  • Method will query database directly: Single(), SingleOrDefault(), First(), FirstOrDefault()
  • Method will perform a search in cache before even issuing the query against the database: Find()

For some performance details, especially in the second case you can look here: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/data/hh949853.aspx?f=255&MSPPError=-2147217396#3

In addition, in the first group you can define complex queries, but with Find() method you can provide only entity key for search.

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Single() and SingleOrDefault() is usually used on unique identifiers such as IDs, while First() or FirstOrDefault() is usually used for a query that could have multiple result but you want only the "Top 1".

Single() or First() would throw an exception if no result is returned, SingleOrDefault() and FirstOrDefault() catches the exception and returns null or default(ResultDataType).

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