This rule flags places where a collection expression could be used to initialize an array. For example, this rule offers to simplify code like new C[] { ... }, new[] { ... }, and C[] c = { ... } into the collection expression form ([...]).
Options
Options specify the behavior that you want the rule to enforce. For information about configuring options, see Option format.
dotnet_style_prefer_collection_expression
Property
Value
Description
Option name
dotnet_style_prefer_collection_expression
Option values
true | when_types_exactly_match
Prefer to use collection expressions only when types match exactly, for example, int[] i = new int[] { 1, 2, 3 };.
when_types_loosely_match (.NET 9 and later versions)*
Prefer to use collection expressions even when types match loosely, for example, IEnumerable<int> i = new int[] { 1, 2, 3 };. The targeted type must match the type on the right-hand side or be one of the following types: IEnumerable<T>, ICollection<T>, IList<T>, IReadOnlyCollection<T>, IReadOnlyList<T>.
false | never
Disables the rule.
Default option value
true in .NET 8 when_types_loosely_match in .NET 9 and later versions
*The code fix when this option is used might change the semantics of your code. For example, if you had IEnumerable<int> x = new int[] { 1, 2, 3 };, then in the original code, an array is produced. But in the new code (IEnumerable<int> x = [1, 2, 3];), an internal compiler-synthesized type is produced instead. You can observe this difference if you use an is check or a cast.
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