Hi! I would strongly advice to not have the DTO as inner class of the business object. Speaking in clean architecture terms, the DTO belongs to the boundary layer and should thus be separated from business rules and objects
Hi! Yes, I agree, it makes sense that DTO and business object should be separated. I more thought about a situation where for instance you have an adapter that receives an object, transforms it to a different form, and then serializes (e.g. to store in a file).
this "different form" can be a private inner class IMO
because nothing outside the adapter needs to know about it, it's an implementation detail to facilitate serialization
This would imply that you pass the business object to something outside the business layer.
This then gets a question of personal preferences and project conventions. Going strictly by clean architecture, a business object should never be passed to another module.
If you use, for example, JPA and you would not do this conversion-step, you would pollute your business object with JPA annotations and thus couple your business object (partially) to an I/O channel.
but let's imagine that you have some infrastructure code outside your domain that intercepts your DTOs and for any reason need to adapt them before serializing. In this scenario...
In some porjects, this might be okay ("This is a web service with a database and will always be a web service with a database!"), in some projects, you may want to have the flexibility to switch the I/O channels ("Today we do web and database, tomorrow, we do CLI and flat file")