@flawr yes, they are starting out. But this is obviously homework, so they have a teacher that told them that classes must mirror real-world things and their properties. I know this happens a lot. I know OOP is taught by people that never needed to write a real-world complex program using OOP, and their understanding of OOP comes from classes taught by people that never had to write a real-world complex program using OOP.
My first C++ book started off with a skeleton program that was a class Application with some variables and a single function Run. The main() instantiated an object of class Application and called its Run function. Shit. That was just pointless, and the variables were all global variables. The class was an excuse to have global variables without calling them global. Put me off from C++ and OOP for a decade!
@CrisLuengo Right, or similarly with apples and oranges, but it can be a little bit fruitless:)
But I think you can also arguet that you can do object oriented programming without any constructs of classes or objects in the typical oop sense - you could also do oop in Haskell
@CrisLuengo I meant you don't need a feature in your language that groups/encapsulates data. I think you can view OOP more as how you think about a problem.
OOP is a way to design software. You then implement that design. The design is built up around objects. How you map those objects in the implementation is irrelevant for it to be OOP.