Static classes are used when you aren't going to instantiate objects. You get one "instance" of that class - you can't do things like:
MyStaticClass m = new MyStaticClass();
m.SomeFunc();
when you've got a static class. Instead you'd use it by using the class name itself. Something like:
MyStaticClass.SomeFunc();
As to what would you use to keep track of every Customer object? You could use some sort of collection to hold these. Granted, in a real system there'd be some sort of persistence piece, likely a database, to hold the data. But you could just make something like:
IEnumerable<Customer> Customers = new List<Customer>();
And then add your customers to that list
Customers.Add(new Customer() { ... });
Back to the question about static methods...
So, the deal here is that you're not going to be referencing instance members in a static method, so you wouldn't use static methods to update a particular Customer's address. Assuming your Customer class looked like:
public class Customer
{
public string Address { get; set; }
}
You couldn't use a static method like
public static void SetAddress()
because each Customer (presumably) has a different address. You couldn't access the customer's address there because it isn't static. Get that? Instead, you'd use a static method if you were wanting to do something that didn't need to deal with instance data. I use static methods for things like utility functions.
public static double ComputeSomething(double someVal) { ... }
Here, the ComputeSomething function can be called by anybody like:
var result = MyStaticClass.ComputeSomething(3.15);
The takeaway here is that static classes aren't used to instantiate objects, rather they are used really as a convenient container to hold functions. Static functions are ones that can be on a non-static class but can't access any of the instance data.
One place where a static function would be used would be for the Singleton pattern. You make the constructor non-public so folks can't call it, and instead provide a static method on the class to return the one and only instance of the class. Something like:
public class MySingleton
{
private static MySingleton instance;
private MySingleton() {}
public static MySingleton Instance
{
get
{
if (instance == null)
{
instance = new MySingleton();
}
return instance;
}
}
}