46

I dont have much experience of using these 2 ways to extend a class or create extension methods against a class. By looking others work, I have a question here.

I saw people using a partial class to extend an entity class in a project. Meanwhile, in the same project, there is another folder containing a lot extension methods to the entity class.

Is it right to do so? I mean these 2 ways both work well. Could you give me some real idea of how to pick one or the other when I want extend a class?

3
  • @Cody Gray You mean a design pattern or language feature in c#
    – ValidfroM
    May 16, 2011 at 14:49
  • It's a design pattern. Composition is not a "language feature in C#", or any other language that I know of. May 16, 2011 at 14:50
  • 4
    Cody Gray's comment is a pure dogmatic assertion which is not argumented and cannot be. Partial classes/methods and extension methods serve different purposes and open totally different possibilities. Composition has nothing to do with it and is a third concept with its own pro/cons.
    – Ssithra
    May 25, 2011 at 14:44

9 Answers 9

46

Some of differences that will determine whether you want to use a Partial Class or an Extension Method are

Partial Class

  • Only works against classes in the same project/assembly
  • Target class has to be marked as partial
  • Has access to the Target class' fields and protected members
  • Target must be a class implementation

Extension Method

  • Can be applied against classes in other assembles
  • Must be static, has access to only the Target classes public members
  • Target of extension can be a concrete type, or an abstract type or interface
1
  • Also: methods introduced via partial class show up in intellisense but with extension methods the coder must know about it. VS can help you include the namespace but you still need to know the method name. Someone unfamiliar with the extension methods may not know they even exist. (i often have trouble remembering my own extension methods, which is why i considered converting some to partial classes).
    – Etherman
    Dec 15, 2019 at 9:34
26

Partial classes should be used in code generation scenarios.

Since the generated file might get overwritten at any time, one uses partial classes to write into the non-generated file.

Additionally, partials will only work if they are part of the same assembly - they cannot cross assembly boundaries.

If these are not your constraints, you can and should use extension methods - of course, after considering other possibilities such as inheritance and composition for suitability.

1
  • 1
    Perfect for database-first ADO.net data models. Apr 2, 2016 at 14:55
3

You can use extension methods on a NULL instance but not instance methods (of partial classes or otherwise). This is a consequence of extension methods actually being static.

2

I use partial methods when I need a class to implement an interface, but the class code is autogenerated (VS uses partial classes to generate code for both web services and EF models).

I use extension methods when the new method that I'm adding to the type is appropriate for any value of that type. (good examples: int.IsEven(), string.IsEmpty(); bad examples: int.IsOldEnoughToDrive(), string.IsLastName()).

2
  • good extension methods are business logic irrelavent, arent they?
    – ValidfroM
    May 17, 2011 at 11:04
  • 1
    Typically, yes. By adhering to the rule about an extension method being relevant for any value of a given type, you filter away most of your opportunities to have business logic in the extension method.
    – lance
    May 17, 2011 at 12:17
2

you can use partial classes in a project you're developing, while extension methods could be used also to extend projects you don't have source code too..

2

Partial works only if both files are in the same project, and you can access private and protected members of that class.

Extension methods are just static methods, and can't access private members.

So if you want to access private and protected members, only way you have is partial, if no, answer to the question, should the method you want to add be visible everywhere you want to use class? if yes, use partial, if no, it's some kind of extension, use extension methods.

By the way, if the first class is not generated by some tool, you can write your function there except of using partial ;)

hope this helps

1

If you choose the Partial Class route but find you are repeating the same code, switch to Extension Methods.

For example, i have many generated classes with methods which return IEnumerable<Track> data. I want to extend each class somehow to give me the option of receiving the data in the format IEnumerable<MediaItem>.

I have a general requirement here to transform IEnumerable<Track> data to IEnumerable<MediaItem>. In this case, rather than writing multiple partial class methods an extension method works best:

public static class ExtensionMethods
{
    public static IEnumerable<MediaItem> ToMediaItems(this IEnumerable<Track> tracks)
    {
        return from t in tracks
               select new MediaItem
               {
                   artist = t.Artist,
                   title = t.Title,
                   // blah blah
               };
    }
}

This gives me the following options:

var data = Playlist.Tracks.ToMediaItems();
var data = Podcast.Tracks.ToMediaItems();
// etc..
0

A partial class is useful when you want to extend a generated class. This way you can write your code in one file, and then when/if the other 'part' of your class needs to be re-generated, it can be done safely, as that code file hasn't changed.

1
  • 1
    but this argument applies to Extension Methods too
    – Lloyd
    Feb 16, 2012 at 15:41
0
Partial Class - 

split the definition of a class or a struct, or an interface over two or more source files

Extension Method  

Extension methods enable you to "add" methods to existing types without creating a new derived type, recompiling, or otherwise modifying the original type

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