In your example, there's no difference. Both are calling the default constructor and not passing in any values. The { } is the object initializer notation which allows you to set values on public properties that aren't passed in through the constructor.
Ex. With the following class, PropertyA is passed in through the constructor and PropertyA, PropertyB, PropertyC are settable on the object.
class TestClass
{
public string PropertyA { get; set; }
public string PropertyB { get; set; }
public string PropertyC { get; set; }
public TestClass(string propertyA)
{
propertyA = propertyA;
}
}
If you needed set all values you could do this
var test1 = new TestClass("A");
test1.PropertyB = "B";
test1.PropertyC = "C";
Or the equivalent using the object initializer format would be
var test2 = new TestClass("A") {PropertyB = "B", PropertyC = "C"};