You have a statement (if or while, for example), right before the code you posted, without curly braces.
For example:
if (somethingIsTrue)
{
var user= new ApplicationUser {
UserName = model.myUser.Email,
Email = model.myUser.Email ,
};
}
is correct, but the code below:
if (somethingIsTrue)
var user = new ApplicationUser {
UserName = model.myUser.Email,
Email = model.myUser.Email ,
};
will result in CS1023: Embedded statement cannot be a declaration or labeled statement.
UPDATE
The reason, according to @codefrenzy, is that the newly declared variable will immediately go out of scope, unless it is enclosed in a block statement, where it can be accessed from.
The compilation will pass in the following cases though.
If you only initialize a new instance of a type, without declaring a new variable:
if (somethingIsTrue)
new ApplicationUser {
UserName = model.myUser.Email,
Email = model.myUser.Email ,
};
or if you assign a value to an existing variable:
ApplicationUser user;
if (somethingIsTrue)
user = new ApplicationUser {
UserName = model.myUser.Email,
Email = model.myUser.Email ,
};
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