I was asked the above question in an interview. Could you please explain the differences? ( performance - memory - usage - when to use which ? )
Thank you,
Erkan
I was asked the above question in an interview. Could you please explain the differences? ( performance - memory - usage - when to use which ? )
Thank you,
Erkan
I assume you were asked for the differences?
A static method on a static class can be used to define an extension method. A static method on a non-static class cannot.
In terms of performance and memory usage; precisely nothing. Having a static class means you know there are no instances, but back in 1.1 having a private constructor sufficed. Use a static class if it simply makes no sense to have an instance! (utility classes etc)
When your providing utility functions and all your methods are static I would use a static Method in a static class.
When you want to provide utility methods that just deal with your instance. I would use static methods e.g.
var myClass = MyClass.Create();
var myClass = MyClass.Parse("serialized.MyClass");
Declaring a static class documents your intent for that class to be a collection of static functionality, and anyone adding instance members will get a compilation error.
A non-static class with static members usually indicates that the class is designed to be instantiated at some point. Static methods of these classes usually do one of two things:
Also, as mentioned already, extension methods can only be declared on a static class.