Plain old CLR object
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Plain Old CLR Object or POCO is a play on the term POJO, from the Java EE programming world (which was coined by Martin Fowler in 2000 Referenzfehler: Es fehlt ein schließendes </ref>
. and are persistence ignorant objects. In .NET terms, the word is most often used in the programmatic sense, to differentiate a non-serviced component (see MTS) from a "standard object". It can also be used in a tongue-in-cheek manner, referencing the perceived complexity and invasiveness of Java-based programming frameworks such as the legacy EJB2.
POCO is often incorrectly expanded to Plain Old C# Object, but POCOs can be created with any language targeting the CLR. An alternative acronym sometimes used is PONO,<ref>See, for example, a reference to PONO in this whitepaper: [http://www.springframework.net/doc-latest/reference/pdf/spring-net-reference.pdf Spring Some benefits of POCO objects are:
- Allows a simple storage mechanism for data, and simplifies serialization/passing data through layers.
- Goes hand-in-hand with dependency injection, and the repository pattern.
- Minimized complexity and dependencies on other layers (higher layers only care about the POCOs, POCOs don't care about anything) which facilitates loose coupling.
- Increases testability through simplification.
See also
- []
- Data Transfer Object
- POTS for Plain old telephone service