I've seen this question posted here previously but I'm not satisfied that I understand the complete ramifications. The problem is what return type should a data layer that uses linq-to-sql return for maximum flexibility and query ability. This is what I've read/found:
IEnumerable is limited and only allows for read forward operation. IEnumerable is the most generic. What I've found is that IEnumerable does allow query operations vs the extension syntax.
List allows for most flexibility because of insert operations.
Collections should be used instead of list to enable read only collections.
IQueryable should never be used, it should be "used and turned off". IQueryable doesn't return a list but generates a query syntax for database.
I feel I have a better feel for the trade offs but still not sure about a few things:
Why would I choose the interface variants over the concrete types? I.e IList or ICollection vs List or Collection. What benefit would I get?
I see that the extension operations work but will the expanded query syntax work as well?
Someone suggested I use AsQueryable() before. But, why would I do this if I don't have connection to the database? It seems the extension methods work regardless.