Let us say that we have 2 Classes Expense1
and Expense2
. Which class implementation is preferred over the other, or which is considered closer to being object-oriented?
I always thought that doing Exp2.Calculate(1.5M,2)
is more readable than
exp1.Calculate()
and using the properties of exp1 Class as the needed values for the calculate Method.
Expense1
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
public class Expense1
{
public decimal ExpenseValue { get; set; }
public int NumberOfItems { get; set; }
private decimal result;
public decimal Result
{
get
{
return this.NumberOfItems * this.ExpenseValue;
}
}
public void Calculate()
{
this.result = this.ExpenseValue * this.NumberOfItems;
}
public void expense1()
{
this.ExpenseValue = 0;
this.NumberOfItems = 0;
}
}
Expense2
class Expense2
{
public decimal Calculate(decimal expenseValue, int numberOfItems)
{
return expenseValue * numberOfItems;
}
}
Implementation of both classes
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Expense1 exp1 = new Expense1();
exp1.NumberOfItems = 2;
exp1.ExpenseValue = 1.5M ;
exp1.Calculate();
Console.WriteLine("Expense1:" + exp1.Result.ToString());
Expense2 exp2 = new Expense2();
string result = string.Empty;
result = exp2.Calculate(1.5M,2).ToString();
Console.WriteLine("Expense2:" + result);
Console.ReadKey();
}
}
NumberOfItems
andExpenseValue
values in theCalculate
method, then useExpense2
. if you are using them somewhere else inside theExpense
class, useExpense
.\Expense1
is good for data binding.Expense2
is good for service calls. Both are good OOP for their respective uses.