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Home/ Questions/Q 183035
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T15:02:42+00:00 2026-05-11T15:02:42+00:00

I have several classes that do not really need any state. From the organizational

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I have several classes that do not really need any state. From the organizational point of view, I would like to put them into hierarchy.

But it seems I can’t declare inheritance for static classes.

Something like that:

public static class Base { }  public static class Inherited : Base { } 

will not work.

Why have the designers of the language closed that possibility?

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  1. 2026-05-11T15:02:42+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 3:02 pm

    Citation from here:

    This is actually by design. There seems to be no good reason to inherit a static class. It has public static members that you can always access via the class name itself. The only reasons I have seen for inheriting static stuff have been bad ones, such as saving a couple of characters of typing.

    There may be reason to consider mechanisms to bring static members directly into scope (and we will in fact consider this after the Orcas product cycle), but static class inheritance is not the way to go: It is the wrong mechanism to use, and works only for static members that happen to reside in a static class.

    (Mads Torgersen, C# Language PM)

    Other opinions from channel9

    Inheritance in .NET works only on instance base. Static methods are defined on the type level not on the instance level. That is why overriding doesn’t work with static methods/properties/events…

    Static methods are only held once in memory. There is no virtual table etc. that is created for them.

    If you invoke an instance method in .NET, you always give it the current instance. This is hidden by the .NET runtime, but it happens. Each instance method has as first argument a pointer (reference) to the object that the method is run on. This doesn’t happen with static methods (as they are defined on type level). How should the compiler decide to select the method to invoke?

    (littleguru)

    And as a valuable idea, littleguru has a partial "workaround" for this issue: the Singleton pattern.

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