405
votes

After discussion with colleagues regarding the use of the 'var' keyword in C# 3 I wondered what people's opinions were on the appropriate uses of type inference via var?

For example I rather lazily used var in questionable circumstances, e.g.:-

foreach(var item in someList) { // ... } // Type of 'item' not clear.
var something = someObject.SomeProperty; // Type of 'something' not clear.
var something = someMethod(); // Type of 'something' not clear.

More legitimate uses of var are as follows:-

var l = new List<string>(); // Obvious what l will be.
var s = new SomeClass(); // Obvious what s will be.

Interestingly LINQ seems to be a bit of a grey area, e.g.:-

var results = from r in dataContext.SomeTable
              select r; // Not *entirely clear* what results will be here.

It's clear what results will be in that it will be a type which implements IEnumerable, however it isn't entirely obvious in the same way a var declaring a new object is.

It's even worse when it comes to LINQ to objects, e.g.:-

var results = from item in someList
              where item != 3
              select item;

This is no better than the equivilent foreach(var item in someList) { // ... } equivilent.

There is a real concern about type safety here - for example if we were to place the results of that query into an overloaded method that accepted IEnumerable<int> and IEnumerable<double> the caller might inadvertently pass in the wrong type.

var does maintain strong typing but the question is really whether it's dangerous for the type to not be immediately apparent on definition, something which is magnified when overloads mean compiler errors might not be issued when you unintentionally pass the wrong type to a method.

15
  • 68
    Using var is fine, but "I don't have to figure out the type" seems like a very bad reason to use it... you're supposed to know what the type is, var is just a shortcut to avoid typing it May 19, 2010 at 14:03
  • 53
    var i = 0; == fail! var c = new CrazyFrigginLongClassName(); == win!
    – dotjoe
    May 19, 2010 at 14:08
  • 6
    "Var also reminds me of the VB/VBA variant type. It also had its place. I recall (from many years ago) its usage being less-than-desirable type and it was rather resource hungry." <- shows this is a baiting question as the 'var' type of C# has nothing to do with the VB/VBA variant type.
    – user7116
    May 19, 2010 at 15:02
  • 20
    var readabilityBeDamned = true;
    – spoulson
    May 19, 2010 at 15:14
  • 9
    The problem with all the examples stated here is that we're looking at ONE line of code. When I see line after line of "var" declarations, one after the other, it gets out of hand. Readability is subjective, but I find var abused far more than used respectably.
    – jro
    Jun 13, 2011 at 4:48

86 Answers 86

292
votes

I still think var can make code more readable in some cases. If I have a Customer class with an Orders property, and I want to assign that to a variable, I will just do this:

var orders = cust.Orders;

I don't care if Customer.Orders is IEnumerable<Order>, ObservableCollection<Order> or BindingList<Order> - all I want is to keep that list in memory to iterate over it or get its count or something later on.

Contrast the above declaration with:

ObservableCollection<Order> orders = cust.Orders;

To me, the type name is just noise. And if I go back and decide to change the type of the Customer.Orders down the track (say from ObservableCollection<Order> to IList<Order>) then I need to change that declaration too - something I wouldn't have to do if I'd used var in the first place.

11
  • 48
    I like having the explicit type in front of me when I'm reading code. How do I know what "cust.Orders" is here without the type? Yes, I could hover my mouse over to find out, but why should I have to? :) Oct 21, 2008 at 18:30
  • 77
    But the point is that in general it doesn't matter. Provided cust.Orders is something you can enumerate (eg foreach over) then it doesn't matter what type it is. The extra code just gets in the way of reading the intent. Oct 21, 2008 at 19:53
  • 67
    But if you only require that cust.Orders is "something you can enumerate" then doesn't declaring it as an IEnumerable<Order> make that requirement explicit and clear? Declaring it as var means you effectively lose that requirement.
    – GrahamS
    Apr 15, 2009 at 10:03
  • 5
    @jon and how would IEnumerbal orders = cust.Orders foreach(var order in orders) make a difference? the only thing IEnumerable says is that you can put it in a foreach but you already knew that from the line below
    – Rune FS
    Feb 4, 2010 at 22:08
  • 18
    "the only thing IEnumerable says is that you can put it in a foreach" - it also expresses the intention that the only thing you can do is enumerate. Using var gives access to and intellisense for public members of the concrete collection type.
    – Joe
    Apr 29, 2010 at 5:45
167
votes

I use var extensively. There has been criticism that this diminishes the readability of the code, but no argument to support that claim.

Admittedly, it may mean that it's not clear what type we are dealing with. So what? This is actually the point of a decoupled design. When dealing with interfaces, you are emphatically not interested in the type a variable has. var takes this much further, true, but I think that the argument remains the same from a readability point of view: The programmer shouldn't actually be interested in the type of the variable but rather in what a variable does. This is why Microsoft also calls type inference “duck typing.”

So, what does a variable do when I declare it using var? Easy, it does whatever IntelliSense tells me it does. Any reasoning about C# that ignores the IDE falls short of reality. In practice, every C# code is programmed in an IDE that supports IntelliSense.

If I am using a var declared variable and get confused what the variable is there for, there's something fundamentally wrong with my code. var is not the cause, it only makes the symptoms visible. Don't blame the messenger.

Now, the C# team has released a coding guideline stating that var should only be used to capture the result of a LINQ statement that creates an anonymous type (because here, we have no real alternative to var). Well, screw that. As long as the C# team doesn't give me a sound argument for this guideline, I am going to ignore it because in my professional and personal opinion, it's pure baloney. (Sorry; I've got no link to the guideline in question.)

Actually, there are some (superficially) good explanations on why you shouldn't use var but I still believe they are largely wrong. Take the example of “searchabililty”: the author claims that var makes it hard to search for places where MyType is used. Right. So do interfaces. Actually, why would I want to know where the class is used? I might be more interested in where it is instantiated and this will still be searchable because somewhere its constructor has to be invoked (even if this is done indirectly, the type name has to be mentioned somewhere).

13
  • 14
    In any decent IDE, you don't use a text search to obtain class usage, you get the IDE to do it based on it's parse tree or however else it identifies the types of objects. Since we're talking about static typing, this will find everything but the anonymous types.
    – Dustman
    Sep 18, 2008 at 20:33
  • 6
    I'd hate to inherit 100k lines of source with no documentation and liberal use of var. Especially if you combine var with less-than-helpful variable names. I could see it being helpful when illustrating a point (or dealing with anonymous types) but in production code?
    – Shea
    Jul 16, 2009 at 20:53
  • 7
    Arnshea: well you've already pointed to the real problem there: the useless variable names, and the missing documentation. I really fail to see what var contributes to the confusion. Certainly, there may be cases where it is important to emphasize the type/size of a variable (e.g. low-level bit operations). That's fine: nobody ever claimed that var should be used exclusively. The rule is simple: if it really causes confusion, don't use it. Jul 17, 2009 at 6:56
  • 17
    Every example opposed to var I've seen assumes that the programmer will be using meaningless variable names. But maybe this is why var is better than explicitly specifying a type: It forces the programmer to come up with good variable names.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Jul 26, 2009 at 16:46
  • 16
    Microsoft also calls type inference “duck typing.” — do they really? I'd be shocked... Aug 19, 2009 at 7:56
118
votes

Var, in my opinion, in C# is a good thingtm. Any variable so typed is still strongly typed, but it gets its type from the right-hand side of the assignment where it is defined. Because the type information is available on the right-hand side, in most cases, it's unnecessary and overly verbose to also have to enter it on the left-hand side. I think this significantly increases readability without decreasing type safety.

From my perspective, using good naming conventions for variables and methods is more important from a readability perspective than explicit type information. If I need the type information, I can always hover over the variable (in VS) and get it. Generally, though, explicit type information shouldn't be necessary to the reader. For the developer, in VS you still get Intellisense, regardless of how the variable is declared. Having said all of that, there may still be cases where it does make sense to explicitly declare the type -- perhaps you have a method that returns a List<T>, but you want to treat it as an IEnumerable<T> in your method. To ensure that you are using the interface, declaring the variable of the interface type can make this explicit. Or, perhaps, you want to declare a variable without an initial value -- because it immediately gets a value based on some condition. In that case you need the type. If the type information is useful or necessary, go ahead and use it. I feel, though, that typically it isn't necessary and the code is easier to read without it in most cases.

8
  • 3
    I agree overall. The key point here in my opinion is to be certain that intent is clear. If it isn't clear to the majority developers on the team, then it is detrimental, not helpful. That said, I personally am a HUGE fan of this, but have had to rein myself in a bit when other devs on my team have had trouble determining my intent. Go figure. May 19, 2010 at 14:15
  • 3
    Eh, I find it easier to read when the type is on the left. Using ReSharper, I don't have to retype the type on the right anyways, so it doesn't bother me. May 19, 2010 at 16:06
  • 1
    @BlueRaja - I find that using good variable names usually eliminates the need to bother with the actual type anyway for understanding. Intellisense is still available on "var" defined variables, so I don't need to know the type to choose a method/property on it when coding.
    – tvanfosson
    May 19, 2010 at 16:11
  • 2
    It is not so much about when you are coding as it is when you have to read the code. May 19, 2010 at 16:34
  • 1
    I must just be on thick side then, I need to good Method and variable names and an understanding of the types being operated on to be able to properly understand the code I'm reading. I think you are right though it is symptomatic of bigger problems. One of trust. To be sure that the code is doing what it appears to be doing you need to be sure of the types being used. May 21, 2010 at 11:11
91
votes

Neither of those is absolutely true; var can have both positive and negative effects on readability. In my opinion, var should be used when either of the following is true:

  1. The type is anonymous (well, you don't have any choice here, as it must be var in this case)
  2. The type is obvious based upon the assigned expression (i.e. var foo = new TypeWithAReallyLongNameTheresNoSenseRepeating())

var has no performance impacts, as it's syntactic sugar; the compiler infers the type and defines it once it's compiled into IL; there's nothing actually dynamic about it.

11
  • 1
    agree on both, though I have long restrictions over the second case, if a type is that long the it's usually a generic type with lots of nested generic arguments, in that case a strongly typed "ShortType equivalent to TypeWithAReallyLongNameTheresNoSenseRepeating" makes more sense
    – user90843
    May 19, 2010 at 13:59
  • 12
    I have no desire to start a religious war, but I personnaly tend to disagree with Ion. I would much prefer a very long, but very precise type name (ala Uncle Bob Martin) than an abbreviated and possibly ambiguous shorter type name. I will add the caveat that I DON'T agree with artificially inflating the length of the name either. If 5 characters creates a concise name that clearly shows intent, then use 5 and not 25. May 19, 2010 at 14:06
  • 2
    @Steve: I have to agree with you; creating a "short type" (which I assume you mean as inheriting from the specific generic type solely for the purpose of shortening the name) is not a good practice; it will require you to duplicate and pass through any constructors from the generic type, as well as preventing you from passing a different type that inherits from the generic type to the function. You're using inheritance like a typedef when it isn't. May 19, 2010 at 14:19
  • 7
    Use var when the type is obvious? Maybe, but the true gain is when the type doesn't matter. If you're doing things like var customers = whatever; var query = from c in customers select stuff it doesn't matter what the exact type of 'customers' is. It's obvious how you can use it, and that's enough. And if the actual type is cumbersome, it's worthwhile to suppress it.
    – Joren
    May 19, 2010 at 15:02
  • 2
    @Kristoffer: I can understand wanting to eliminate the mess of tags, but wrapping them into a class is not (IMO) an acceptable alternative, as you then cut off the possibility of any other (legitimate) child class of that generic type from being a valid parameter. I would rather use an using ShortType = LongGenericType<A,B,C> directive at the top of a file, since that gives the same readability, doesn't require that you recreate the constructors, and doesn't eliminate child classes from being candidates. May 19, 2010 at 15:42
68
votes

From Eric Lippert, a Senior Software Design Engineer on the C# team:

Why was the var keyword introduced?

There are two reasons, one which exists today, one which will crop up in 3.0.

The first reason is that this code is incredibly ugly because of all the redundancy:

Dictionary<string, List<int>> mylists = new Dictionary<string, List<int>>();

And that's a simple example – I've written worse. Any time you're forced to type exactly the same thing twice, that's a redundancy that we can remove. Much nicer to write

var mylists = new Dictionary<string,List<int>>();

and let the compiler figure out what the type is based on the assignment.

Second, C# 3.0 introduces anonymous types. Since anonymous types by definition have no names, you need to be able to infer the type of the variable from the initializing expression if its type is anonymous.

Emphasis mine. The whole article, C# 3.0 is still statically typed, honest!, and the ensuing series are pretty good.

This is what var is for. Other uses probably will not work so well. Any comparison to JScript, VBScript, or dynamic typing is total bunk. Note again, var is required in order to have certain other features work in .NET.

3
  • I find Lippert's argument odd. No one types the second class name, they let Intellisense write it for them, but then he turns around and claims that var is better because the compiler/Intellisense works it out. You can't have it both ways!
    – Dave
    Oct 17, 2008 at 20:28
  • 5
    The C# team doesn't control intellisense, they control the compiler. In any event that's not the main issue. I don't think var would have made the 100 points on saving typing alone.
    – Dustman
    Mar 9, 2009 at 5:19
  • @Dustman: var doesn't save typing at all. It makes you write more! Oct 20, 2011 at 20:45
53
votes

I think the use of var should be coupled with wisely-chosen variable names.

I have no problem using var in a foreach statement, provided it's not like this:

foreach (var c in list) { ... }

If it were more like this:

foreach (var customer in list) { ... }

... then someone reading the code would be much more likely to understand what "list" is. If you have control over the name of the list variable itself, that's even better.

The same can apply to other situations. This is pretty useless:

var x = SaveFoo(foo);

... but this makes sense:

var saveSucceeded = SaveFoo(foo);

Each to his own, I guess. I've found myself doing this, which is just insane:

var f = (float)3;

I need some sort of 12-step var program. My name is Matt, and I (ab)use var.

5
  • 6
    Well the only thing wrong with "var f = (float)3;" is that it should be "var f = 3f" or "var f = 3.0 (cause single precision sucks)".
    – MichaelGG
    Oct 16, 2008 at 1:20
  • 3
    Heh yeah 3f or 3.0 is the way to go! Us var maniacs have to stick together! Oct 16, 2008 at 2:05
  • 27
    The real problem in that first example is "list", not "c". "list" of what? "list" should be renamed to "customers", or "customersWhoOweMoney", or "currentCustomers", or something far more descriptive. And once you have that, the "c" can stay as-is, because you already know what it'll contain.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Sep 16, 2009 at 17:12
  • 4
    Hi Matt! My name is Kenny and I'm a varaddict.
    – kenny
    Mar 21, 2010 at 12:37
  • var MattHamil = "Luke Skywalker"; //stripped a ton out of it Jun 2, 2010 at 5:51
40
votes

We've adopted the ethos "Code for people, not machines", based on the assumption that you spend multiple times longer in maintenance mode than on new development.

For me, that rules out the argument that the compiler "knows" what type the variable is - sure, you can't write invalid code the first time because the compiler stops your code from compiling, but when the next developer is reading the code in 6 months time they need to be able to deduce what the variable is doing correctly or incorrectly and quickly identify the cause of issues.

Thus,

var something = SomeMethod();

is outlawed by our coding standards, but the following is encouraged in our team because it increases readability:

var list = new List<KeyValuePair<string, double>>();
FillList( list );
foreach( var item in list ) {
   DoWork( item ); 
}
3
  • 4
    I've found that ("Code for people, not machines") to be an excellent guideline - following it can result in better code and helps avoid premature optimization.
    – Thanatos
    May 28, 2010 at 0:21
  • 3
    I don't get var list = new KeyValuePair<string, double>? For me a list can have more than on thing.
    – TTT
    Oct 16, 2010 at 3:51
  • "Code for people, not machines" - amen. Dec 12, 2012 at 11:42
39
votes

It's not bad, it's more a stylistic thing, which tends to be subjective. It can add inconsistencies, when you do use var and when you don't.

Another case of concern, in the following call you can't tell just by looking at the code the type returned by CallMe:

var variable = CallMe();

That's my main complain against var.

I use var when I declare anonymous delegates in methods, somehow var looks cleaner than if I'd use Func. Consider this code:

var callback = new Func<IntPtr, bool>(delegate(IntPtr hWnd) {
   ...
});

EDIT: Updated the last code sample based on Julian's input

13
  • 3
    But do you really need to know the type right there at that line? You know that CallMe returns something; isn't it enough to know that a local variable named variable is created? Unless you expand your example, this isn't a very solid complaint, IMO.
    – Randolpho
    May 19, 2010 at 13:53
  • 2
    It's not about not being verbose, it's about not letting the compiler do the syntax sugar for you. Consider this: var getter..., now this Func<object> getter..., with the second you know you don't have to provide any parameters and what it returns. You know from the start "what to do" and can make decisions faster, when designing something or refactoring. Having all the information at hand is more important than a few more characters. This only can be appreciated when you're working with lots of code.
    – user90843
    May 19, 2010 at 14:08
  • 2
    Since we are all talking about visual studio anyway, what's the big deal about hovering your mouse over the variable for a second and just seeing what type is it? Much better than running to the declaration anyway.
    – Rubys
    May 19, 2010 at 14:15
  • 3
    Generic variable and function names (variable, CallMe) make bad examples. However, if CallMe() was a function in some kind of a "phone application", then var call = CallMe(); .... call.HangUp(); would make much more sense. May 19, 2010 at 14:32
  • 3
    @Randolpho: "what's the big deal about hovering your mouse over the variable for a second and just seeing what type is it?" It adds time to the maintenance overhead... plus one second is only the hover time rather than counting the keyboard to mouse context switch. I don't know about you, but I work with a deadline. Every time I have to hover over a variable to find out what type it is, is time that I could have better spent fixing a problem.
    – Powerlord
    May 19, 2010 at 14:49
36
votes

Var is not like variant at all. The variable is still strongly typed, it's just that you don't press keys to get it that way. You can hover over it in Visual Studio to see the type. If you're reading printed code, it's possible you might have to think a little to work out what the type is. But there is only one line that declares it and many lines that use it, so giving things decent names is still the best way to make your code easier to follow.

Is using Intellisense lazy? It's less typing than the whole name. Or are there things that are less work but don't deserve criticism? I think there are, and var is one of them.

1
  • 6
    +1, only person to note that var has nothing to do with Variant.
    – user7116
    May 19, 2010 at 15:03
27
votes

The most likely time you'll need this is for anonymous types (where it is 100% required); but it also avoids repetition for the trivial cases, and IMO makes the line clearer. I don't need to see the type twice for a simple initialization.

For example:

Dictionary<string, List<SomeComplexType<int>>> data = new Dictionary<string, List<SomeComplexType<int>>>();

(please don't edit the hscroll in the above - it kinda proves the point!!!)

vs:

var data = new Dictionary<string, List<SomeComplexType<int>>>();

There are, however, occasions when this is misleading, and can potentially cause bugs. Be careful using var if the original variable and initialized type weren't identical. For example:

static void DoSomething(IFoo foo) {Console.WriteLine("working happily") }
static void DoSomething(Foo foo) {Console.WriteLine("formatting hard disk...");}

// this working code...
IFoo oldCode = new Foo();
DoSomething(oldCode);
// ...is **very** different to this code
var newCode = new Foo();
DoSomething(newCode);
4
  • 1
    (for info, you can get similar issues on anything where this is an implicit type conversion) Aug 19, 2009 at 7:37
  • 1
    Disagree with the part that you don't want to see it twice in the same line. It is possible that in the future you are not directly creating the variable after declaring (for example in an if below the definition) than it might not directly be clear what the type is. Most developers are used to see the type directly at the beginning of the line especially in complex code you don't want to make reading the code more difficult.
    – Gertjan
    Aug 19, 2009 at 8:35
  • @TheVillageIdiot - I rolled back your edit, because on this occasion the hscroll is related to the point ;-p Aug 19, 2009 at 8:52
  • 2
    @Gertjan - my brain is limited; if it is complex, I don't want to see it twice and have to start comparing (interface/concrete/etc). I'm happy to see it once and think "typed as one of them". Aug 19, 2009 at 8:53
17
votes

One specific case where var is difficult: offline code reviews, especially the ones done on paper.

You can't rely on mouse-overs for that.

4
  • 17
    Why the heck are you code reviewing on paper? Think of the trees! ;)
    – Dustman
    Sep 18, 2008 at 20:35
  • 8
    You can have the same problem without using var. The problem isn't var; the problem is bad variable names. If variable names are well-chosen, the use of var doesn't matter.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Jul 26, 2009 at 16:49
  • I have a guy on my team that reviews his own code, and looks for bugs, by printing his code. His walls are COVERED with code. I once walked in and he had an entire large whiteboard covered with a single of his debugging exercises. It was probably ~10000 LOC
    – Beep beep
    Aug 14, 2009 at 3:55
  • Variable names alone don't solve the problem unless you go back to hungarian notation where the type is part of the name.
    – Kevin Gale
    Apr 30, 2010 at 18:00
17
votes

I don't see what the big deal is..

var something = someMethod(); // Type of 'something' not clear <-- not to the compiler!

You still have full intellisense on 'something', and for any ambiguous case you have your unit tests, right? ( do you? )

It's not varchar, it's not dim, and it's certainly not dynamic or weak typing. It is stopping maddnes like this:

List<somethinglongtypename> v = new List<somethinglongtypename>();

and reducing that total mindclutter to:

var v = new List<somethinglongtypename>();

Nice, not quite as nice as:

v = List<somethinglongtypename>();

But then that's what Boo is for.

3
  • the type of 'something' is very clear to the compiler, internally, the "var" gets set to the return type of 'someMethod', it is clear to the compiler, but may not be clear to the developers working on the project. and Boo is growing on me quickly. Sep 25, 2008 at 14:43
  • No, v = List<somethinglongtypename>(); is not even nicer. It is important to distinguish between introducing a new variable and assigning to an existing variable. May 8, 2012 at 4:35
  • Well if you have assigned to 'v' before in the current scope, then it's assignment to an existing. Otherwise it's assignment to new variable 'v'. Easy. May 14, 2012 at 21:12
17
votes

If someone is using the var keyword because they don't want to "figure out the type", that is definitely the wrong reason. The var keyword doesn't create a variable with a dynamic type, the compiler still has to know the type. As the variable always has a specific type, the type should also be evident in the code if possible.

Good reasons to use the var keyword are for example:

  • Where it's needed, i.e. to declare a reference for an anonymous type.
  • Where it makes the code more readable, i.e. removing repetetive declarations.

Writing out the data type often makes the code easier to follow. It shows what data types you are using, so that you don't have to figure out the data type by first figuring out what the code does.

11
votes

Given how powerful Intellisense is now, I am not sure var is any harder to read than having member variables in a class, or local variables in a method which are defined off the visible screen area.

If you have a line of code such as

IDictionary<BigClassName, SomeOtherBigClassName> nameDictionary = new Dictionary<BigClassName, SomeOtherBigClassName>();

Is is much easier or harder to read than:

var nameDictionary = new Dictionary<BigClassName, SomeOtherBigClassName>();
2
  • I didn't actually consider this, at it seems from the other question that is a fairly strong point for one other time to use it.
    – Finglas
    Jun 9, 2009 at 19:12
  • That was basically the only reason they implemented it (besides being able to declare anonymous types, but they could have made "var" a special keyword that was only for anonymous types.)
    – mqp
    Jun 9, 2009 at 19:13
10
votes

I think the key thing with VAR is to only use it where appropriate i.e. when doing things in Linq that it facilitates (and probably in other cases).

If you've got a type for something in the then you should use it - not to do so is simple laziness (as opposed to creative laziness which is generally to be encouraged - good programmers oft work very hard to be lazy and could be considered the source of the thing in the first place).

A blanket ban is as bad as abusing the construct in the first place but there does need to be a sensible coding standard.

The other thing to remember is that its not a VB type var in that it can't change types - it is a strongly typed variable its just that the type is inferred (which is why there are people that will argue that its not unreasonable to use it in, say, a foreach but I'd disagree for reasons of both readability and maintainability).

I suspect this one is going to run and run (-:

Murph

10
votes

Sure, int is easy, but when the variable's type is IEnumerable<MyStupidLongNamedGenericClass<int, string>>, var makes things much easier.

3
  • 2
    +1 for this. int versus var is something to bicker about, but multiple nested generic types make var a godsend. This is where using the type name over and over really destroys the readability of code. May 19, 2010 at 14:09
  • This is absolutely the wrong reason for using it. If your code uses a nested generic type you should derive a specific named class for it. For example: class IntStringEnumerator : IEnumerable<MyStupidLongNamedGenericClass<int, string>> and then use the new name. That cleans up the code and describes the type better.
    – xxbbcc
    Feb 21, 2012 at 14:14
  • Alright, but my example was just hyperbole. IntStringEnumerator i = new IntStringEnumerator() is still too much typing.
    – Blorgbeard
    Feb 25, 2012 at 6:58
9
votes

Stolen from the post on this issue at CodingHorror:


Unfortunately, you and everyone else pretty much got it wrong. While I agree with you that redundancy is not a good thing, the better way to solve this issue would have been to do something like the following:

MyObject m = new();

Or if you are passing parameters:

Person p = new("FirstName", "LastName);

Where in the creation of a new object, the compiler infers the type from the left-hand side, and not the right. This has other advantages over "var", in that it could be used in field declarations as well (there are also some other areas that it could be useful as well, but I won't get into it here).

In the end, it just wasn't intended to reduce redundancy. Don't get me wrong, "var" is VERY important in C# for anonymous types/projections, but the use here is just WAY off (and I've been saying this for a long, long time) as you obfuscate the type that is being used. Having to type it twice is too often, but declaring it zero times is too few.

Nicholas Paldino .NET/C# MVP on June 20, 2008 08:00 AM


I guess if your main concern is to have to type less -- then there isn't any argument that's going to sway you from using it.

If you are only going to ever be the person who looks at your code, then who cares? Otherwise, in a case like this:

var people = Managers.People

it's fine, but in a case like this:

var fc = Factory.Run();

it short circuits any immediate type deductions my brain could begin forming from the 'English' of the code.

Otherwise, just use your best judgment and programming 'courtesy' towards others who might have to work on your project.

1
  • 4
    Your examples above aren't an argument for not using var; they're an argument for using good descriptive variable names. If, instead of [var fc = Factory.Run();] you had [bool fc = Factory.Run();], the code wouldn't become any clearer.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Jul 13, 2009 at 15:20
9
votes

Using var instead of explicit type makes refactorings much easier (therefore I must contradict the previous posters who meant it made no difference or it was purely "syntactic sugar").

You can change the return type of your methods without changing every file where this method is called. Imagine

...
List<MyClass> SomeMethod() { ... }
...

which is used like

...
IList<MyClass> list = obj.SomeMethod();
foreach (MyClass c in list)
  System.Console.WriteLine(c.ToString());
...

If you wanted to refactor SomeMethod() to return an IEnumerable<MySecondClass>, you would have to change the variable declaration (also inside the foreach) in every place you used the method.

If you write

...
var list = obj.SomeMethod();
foreach (var element in list)
  System.Console.WriteLine(element.ToString());
...

instead, you don't have to change it.

2
  • agreed - wondering why this nice side effect isn't being touted as much as some of the other, more subjective pros in the more popular responses. Nov 23, 2009 at 18:44
  • It hapen to me today. I have a factory class that return istance of a MainMenu class. Today i created a MainMenu2 with the same interface of MainMenu. I have my all app code untouched after the change! Nov 9, 2010 at 17:02
8
votes

@aku: One example is code reviews. Another example is refactoring scenarios.

Basically I don't want to go type-hunting with my mouse. It might not be available.

1
  • 2
    It's interesting you say that because var can make refactoring simpler. If you've used var you don't have to. Now you can always rely on the IDE's refactoring tools, but you know, you can always rely on the IDE for the type as well :)
    – Fred
    Nov 27, 2009 at 9:43
8
votes

It's a matter of taste. All this fussing about the type of a variable disappears when you get used to dynamically typed languages. That is, if you ever start to like them (I'm not sure if everybody can, but I do).

C#'s var is pretty cool in that it looks like dynamic typing, but actually is static typing - the compiler enforces correct usage.

The type of your variable is not really that important (this has been said before). It should be relatively clear from the context (its interactions with other variables and methods) and its name - don't expect customerList to contain an int...

I am still waiting to see what my boss thinks of this matter - I got a blanket "go ahead" to use any new constructs in 3.5, but what will we do about maintenance?

7
votes

In your comparison between IEnumerable<int> and IEnumerable<double> you don't need to worry - if you pass the wrong type your code won't compile anyway.

There's no concern about type-safety, as var is not dynamic. It's just compiler magic and any type unsafe calls you make will get caught.

Var is absolutely needed for Linq:

var anonEnumeration =
    from post in AllPosts()
    where post.Date > oldDate
    let author = GetAuthor( post.AuthorId )
    select new { 
        PostName = post.Name, 
        post.Date, 
        AuthorName = author.Name
    };

Now look at anonEnumeration in intellisense and it will appear something like IEnumerable<'a>

foreach( var item in anonEnumeration ) 
{
    //VS knows the type
    item.PostName; //you'll get intellisense here

    //you still have type safety
    item.ItemId;   //will throw a compiler exception
}

The C# compiler is pretty clever - anon types generated separately will have the same generated type if their properties match.

Outside of that, as long as you have intellisense it makes good sense to use var anywhere the context is clear.

//less typing, this is good
var myList = new List<UnreasonablyLongClassName>();

//also good - I can't be mistaken on type
var anotherList = GetAllOfSomeItem();

//but not here - probably best to leave single value types declared
var decimalNum = 123.456m;
5
  • Please rid off IQueriable<T> before iterating: anonEnumeration.ToList();
    – David Diez
    Jan 14, 2013 at 11:23
  • @DavidDiez could you rephrase? Your statement makes no sense. None of my code snippets reference IQueryable or .ToList()
    – Keith
    Jan 14, 2013 at 12:51
  • var anonEnumeration = from post in AllPosts() where post.Date > oldDate let author = GetAuthor( post.AuthorId ) select new { PostName = post.Name, post.Date, AuthorName = author.Name }; does not return an IQueriable<T>?
    – David Diez
    Jan 14, 2013 at 15:06
  • 1
    @DavidDiez it depends on what AllPosts() returns - the asker refers to List<T> so I assumed that. In that case the result is that anonEnumeration will be of type IEnumerable<'a>. Now if AllPosts() returns IQueryable<T> instead then anonEnumeration will become IQueryable<'a> (note no i in Queryable) - however in that case my code still works because IQueryable<T> implements IEnumerable<T>. There are loads of better Q&As on here about the distinctions between them - here my case is that 'a is anonymous and var allows you to assign it to a statically typed variable.
    – Keith
    Jan 15, 2013 at 12:18
  • Ohh I see, thanks for explaining it :) My comment was because iterating an IQueryable<T> is not a good practice because in each iteration you are making a read statement in DB. Be sure to *.ToList() IQueryable<T>'s before iterating them
    – David Diez
    Jan 16, 2013 at 11:10
7
votes

I guess it depends on your perspective. I personally have never had any difficulty understanding a piece of code because of var "misuse", and my coworkers and I use it quite a lot all over. (I agree that Intellisense is a huge aid in this regard.) I welcome it as a way to remove repetitive cruft.

After all, if statements like

var index = 5; // this is supposed to be bad

var firstEligibleObject = FetchSomething(); // oh no what type is it
                                            // i am going to die if i don't know

were really that impossible to deal with, nobody would use dynamically typed languages.

3
  • Presumably in .Net 4 where dynamic types are common place, this will become more important? Jun 9, 2009 at 19:14
  • 2
    On the contrary, if you're confused by "var" now, I would expect that you will be additionally confused by "dynamic." God forbid anyone ever declares a dynamic and then makes a reference to it using "var" :)
    – mqp
    Jun 9, 2009 at 19:22
  • I meant something like dynamic d = 52; var x = d; which ought to be fine.
    – mqp
    Aug 7, 2009 at 13:53
7
votes

I only use var when it's clear to see what type is used.

For example, I would use var in this case, because you can see immediately that x will be of the type "MyClass":

var x = new MyClass();

I would NOT use var in cases like this, because you have to drag the mouse over the code and look at the tooltip to see what type MyFunction returns:

var x = MyClass.MyFunction();

Especially, I never use var in cases where the right side is not even a method, but only a value:

var x = 5;

(because the compiler can't know if I want a byte, short, int or whatever)

1
  • If the right hand side isn't clear enough to justify the use of var, then var isn't the problem: the right hand side is the problem. It's not descriptive enough. Customer c = GetContext() is still unclear and no better than using var.
    – JulianR
    May 19, 2010 at 18:52
6
votes

To me, the antipathy towards var illustrates why bilingualism in .NET is important. To those C# programmers who have also done VB .NET, the advantages of var are intuitively obvious. The standard C# declaration of:

List<string> whatever = new List<string>();

is the equivalent, in VB .NET, of typing this:

Dim whatever As List(Of String) = New List(Of String)

Nobody does that in VB .NET, though. It would be silly to, because since the first version of .NET you've been able to do this...

Dim whatever As New List(Of String)

...which creates the variable and initializes it all in one reasonably compact line. Ah, but what if you want an IList<string>, not a List<string>? Well, in VB .NET that means you have to do this:

Dim whatever As IList(Of String) = New List(Of String)

Just like you'd have to do in C#, and obviously couldn't use var for:

IList<string> whatever = new List<string>();

If you need the type to be something different, it can be. But one of the basic principles of good programming is reducing redundancy, and that's exactly what var does.

2
  • 1
    Funny you mention bilingualism as something that promotes the use of var. My antagonism towards the var keyword stems directly from my fluency in javascript! :)
    – urig
    Jan 17, 2010 at 20:16
  • var in C# has no connection whatsoever with var in JavaScript. A var-declared variable in C# is strongly-typed.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Dec 23, 2010 at 0:23
6
votes

Use it for anonymous types - that's what it's there for. Anything else is a use too far. Like many people who grew up on C, I'm used to looking at the left of the declaration for the type. I don't look at the right side unless I have to. Using var for any old declaration makes me do that all the time, which I personally find uncomfortable.

Those saying 'it doesn't matter, use what you're happy with' are not seeing the whole picture. Everyone will pick up other people's code at one point or another and have to deal with whatever decisions they made at the time they wrote it. It's bad enough having to deal with radically different naming conventions, or - the classic gripe - bracing styles, without adding the whole 'var or not' thing into the mix. The worst case will be where one programmer didn't use var and then along comes a maintainer who loves it, and extends the code using it. So now you have an unholy mess.

Standards are a good thing precisely because they mean you're that much more likely to be able to pick up random code and be able to grok it quickly. The more things that are different, the harder that gets. And moving to the 'var everywhere' style makes a big difference.

I don't mind dynamic typing, and I don't mind implict typing - in languages that are designed for them. I quite like Python. But C# was designed as a statically explicitly-typed language and that's how it should stay. Breaking the rules for anonymous types was bad enough; letting people take that still further and break the idioms of the language even more is something I'm not happy with. Now that the genie is out of the bottle, it'll never go back in. C# will become balkanised into camps. Not good.

2
  • 7
    Wow. Ignoring all the arguments brought forth in this thread so far and re-setting the whole discussion is quite an achievement. Sep 25, 2008 at 14:45
  • This 100% describes how I feel about 'var', particularly from the standpoint of picking up someone elses code. Use of var radically changes the task at hand if it's littered throughout. +1
    – Simon
    Oct 16, 2012 at 11:22
6
votes

Many time during testing, I find myself having code like this:

var something = myObject.SomeProperty.SomeOtherThing.CallMethod();
Console.WriteLine(something);

Now, sometimes, I'll want to see what the SomeOtherThing itself contains, SomeOtherThing is not the same type that CallMethod() returns. Since I'm using var though, I just change this:

var something = myObject.SomeProperty.SomeOtherThing.CallMethod();

to this:

var something = myObject.SomeProperty.SomeOtherThing;

Without var, I'd have to keep changing the declared type on the left hand side as well. I know it's minor, but it's extremely convenient.

6
votes

For the afficionados that think var saves time, it takes less keystrokes to type:

StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();

than

var sb = new StringBuilder();

Count em if you don't believe me...

19 versus 21

I'll explain if I have to, but just try it... (depending on the current state of your intellisense you may have to type a couple more for each one)

And it's true for every type you can think of!!

My personal feeling is that var should never be used except where the type is not known because it reduces recognition readabiltiy in code. It takes the brain longer to recognize the type than a full line. Old timers who understand machine code and bits know exactly what I am talking about. The brain processes in parallel and when you use var you force it to serialize its input. Why would anyone want to make their brain work harder? That's what computers are for.

2
  • I find the repetition of stringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder() messy and longer to clearly recognise. It's extra noise. The problem is, determining what does and doesn't constitute extra intellectual effort to understand some code is pretty subjective!
    – ljs
    Mar 12, 2010 at 12:59
  • "var should never be used except where the type is not known..." - You can ALWAYS know the type, as does the compiler. This is not dynamic typing, it just lets the compiler determine the type for you. But the type is never an unknown. May 19, 2010 at 20:23
5
votes

I split var all over the places, the only questionable places for me are internal short types, e.g. I prefer int i = 3; over var i = 3;

5
votes

It can certainly make things simpler, from code I wrote yesterday:

var content  = new Queue<Pair<Regex, Func<string, bool>>>();
...
foreach (var entry in content) { ... }

This would have be extremely verbose without var.

Addendum: A little time spent with a language with real type inference (e.g. F#) will show just how good compilers are at getting the type of expressions right. It certainly has meant I tend to use var as much as I can, and using an explicit type now indicates that the variable is not of the initialising expression's type.

1
  • Yup, compilers are smarter than us, get over it!
    – Benjol
    Dec 10, 2009 at 9:57
5
votes

None, except that you don't have to write the type name twice. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb383973.aspx

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