Sweetening LINQ syntax with syntactic sugar
C# 3.0 introduced some new language keywords in 2008 in order to make it easier for programmers with experience with SQL to write LINQ queries. This syntactic sugar is sometimes called the LINQ query comprehension syntax.
More Information: The LINQ query comprehension syntax is limited in functionality. It only provides C# keywords for the most commonly used LINQ features. You must use extension methods to access all the features of LINQ. You can read more about why it is called comprehension syntax at the following link: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6229187/linq-why-is-it-called-comprehension-syntax
Consider the following array of string
values:
var names = new string[] { "Michael", "Pam", "Jim", "Dwight", "Angela", "Kevin", "Toby", "Creed" };
To filter and sort the names, you could use extension methods and lambda expressions...