Extension methods versus inheritance

Well... you can't always use inheritance. String, for example, is a sealed class. It's in those cases where an extension method really shines.

In general, extension methods are best for little utilities that you might otherwise put into a static class, but that operate against an instance of a particular type. Strings are a great example -- almost everyone has their own little string extension methods to do little operations on a string.

Another great place for extension methods is against enumerations. I almost always include a HasFlag extension method against any [Flags] enumerations I create.


Extension methods are useful, but they are harder to discover through the IDE than regular methods, since they are not attached to the original class and there are no clues as to where the code for them might reside. There are some best practice suggestions as to where to put them and how to name them, but these are only guidelines and there is no guarantee that someone will follow them.

Usually you would use extension methods if you are only adding functionality to a well known, well used class or interface such as the .Net base classes, that you don't have access to the code for. Extension methods also have the constraint in that you not only have to have the original assembly, you have to have the assembly with the extension methods in it, which must be understood by consumers of your code.

Using inheritance will allow you to add, remove or override functionality, and ensure that it is always present with the class when you build it.


Extension methods should be used when you want to provide an implementation across a variety of types that should share the same behavior, but would otherwise be disimilar. That's why you see extension methods being used on interfaces a lot, because it's a very powerful tool to ensure that any given implementation of an interface will have the same implementation of a given behavior.

For example, the Skip and Take extension methods.