The key point here is that nested classes can access private fields in the outer class.
So the following code works:
public class Foo
{
private bool _field;
public static class Extensions
{
public static bool GetField(Foo foo)
{
return foo._field;
}
}
}
Here you are explicitly passing in an instance of the class, and a static method is allowed to access a private field... seems reasonable:
bool fieldValue = Foo.Extensions.GetField(new Foo());
However, although extension methods are just an alternative syntax for static methods, they are invoked the same way as non-static instance methods.
Now if extension methods were allowed in nested classes, they could in fact access private fields, and they would be that much closer to instance methods. This could lead to some unintended consequences.
In summary, if this were allowed:
public class Foo
{
private bool _field;
public static class Extensions
{
public static bool GetField(*this* Foo foo) // not allowed, compile error.
{
return foo._field;
}
}
}
Then you could write the following code, making the extension method behave a bit more like an instance method than it should be:
var foo = new Foo();
var iGotAPrivateField = foo.GetField();
Edit as a result of comments
Why is it a bad idea for extension methods to be equivalent to instance methods?
In Eric Lippert's words (emphasis mine):
So, yes, the oft-heard criticism that "extension methods are not object-oriented" is entirely correct, but also rather irrelevant. Extension methods certainly are not object-oriented. They put the code that manipulates the data far away from the code that declares the data, they cannot break encapsulation and talk to the private state of the objects they appear to be methods on, they do not play well with inheritance, and so on. They're procedural programming in a convenient object-oriented dress.