This is a collection initializer: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb384062.aspx
The type so initialized must implement IEnumerable and have an Add method. The items in the curly-brace list are passed to the add method; different items in the list could be passed to different Add methods. If there's an Add overload with more than one argument, you put the multiple arguments in a comma-separated list enclosed in curly braces.
For example:
class MyWeirdCollection : IEnumerable
{
public void Add(int i) { /*...*/ }
public void Add(string s) { /*...*/ }
public void Add(int i, string s) { /*...*/ }
//IEnumerable implementation omitted for brevity
}
This class could be initialized thus:
var weird = new MyWeirdCollection { 1, "Something", {5, "Something else"} };
This compiles to something like this:
var temp = new MyWeirdCollection();
temp.Add(1);
temp.Add("Something");
temp.Add(5, "Something else");
var weird = temp;
In his blog post (link posted by Eric Lippert in the comments), Mads Torgersen expresses this concisely:
The list you provide is not a “list of elements to add”, but a “list of sets of arguments to Add methods”. ...[W]e do separate overload resolution against Add methods for each entry in the list.
List<T>is going to do with that object? The compiler has no special knowledge that any particularList<T>constructor does or does not do anything special with the array passed to it. – Eric Lippert Feb 24 '12 at 19:06List<T>constructor. The elements of the array are then, if I recall correctly, copied into the list's own internal array; the first array is then eligible for garbage colelction. – phoog Feb 24 '12 at 19:06