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Home/ Questions/Q 35819
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T14:17:45+00:00 2026-05-10T14:17:45+00:00

I remember back when MS released a forum sample application, the design of the

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I remember back when MS released a forum sample application, the design of the application was like this:

/Classes/User.cs /Classes/Post.cs … /Users.cs /Posts.cs

So the classes folder had just the class i.e. properties and getters/setters. The Users.cs, Post.cs, etc. have the actual methods that access the Data Access Layer, so Posts.cs might look like:

public class Posts {     public static Post GetPostByID(int postID)     {           SqlDataProvider dp = new SqlDataProvider();           return dp.GetPostByID(postID);     } } 

Another more traditional route would be to put all of the methods in Posts.cs into the class definition also (Post.cs).

Splitting things into 2 files makes it much more procedural doesn’t it? Isn’t this breaking OOP rules since it is taking the behavior out of the class and putting it into another class definition?

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  1. 2026-05-10T14:17:45+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 2:17 pm

    If every method is just a static call straight to the data source, then the ‘Posts’ class is really a Factory. You could certainly put the static methods in ‘Posts’ into the ‘Post’ class (this is how CSLA works), but they are still factory methods.

    I would say that a more modern and accurate name for the ‘Posts’ class would be ‘PostFactory’ (assuming that all it has is static methods).

    I guess I wouldn’t say this is a ‘procedural’ approach necessarily — it’s just a misleading name, you would assume in the modern OO world that a ‘Posts’ object would be stateful and provide methods to manipulate and manage a set of ‘Post’ objects.

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