The virtual keyword has an effect when used on properties in EF Code First. Can someone describe all its ramifications in different situations?

For instance, I know it can control lazy loading -- if you use the virtual keyword on an ICollection/one-to-many relationship property, it will be lazy-loaded by default, whereas if you leave the virtual keyword out, it will be eager-loaded.

What other effects can virtual have in EF with POCO entities? Should I default to using virtual on all my properties, or default to NOT using it?

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So far, I know of these effects.

  • Lazy Loading: Any virtual ICollections will be lazy-loaded unless you specifically mark them otherwise.
  • More efficient change tracking. If you meet all the following requirements then your change tracking can use a more efficient method by hooking your virtual properties. From the link:

    To get change tracking proxies, the basic rule is that your class must be public, non-abstract or non-sealed. Your class must also implement public virtual getters/setters for all properties that are persisted. Finally, you must declare collection based relationship navigation properties as ICollection<T> only. They cannot be a concrete implementation or another interface that derives from ICollection<T> (a difference from the Deferred Loading proxy)

Another useful link describing this is MSDN's Requirements for Creating POCO Proxies.

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There is no other reason to make properties virtual. Navigation properties are marked as virtual for lazy loading and scalar properties are marked as virtual for change tracking. – Ladislav Mrnka Apr 8 '11 at 18:31
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