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Home/ Questions/Q 8249945
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T23:42:57+00:00 2026-06-07T23:42:57+00:00

I don’t know how to phrase this question precisely, but this is what I

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I don’t know how to phrase this question precisely, but this is what I want to achieve
(I am implementing the Towers of Hanoi illustration using stacks:

This is inside the main() function:

System.out.println("Type the source pole number and the destination pole number");
int a = reader.nextInt();
int b = reader.nextInt();
boolean move = moveDics(a, b);

These are the stacks which represent the 3 poles:

    Stack<Integer> pole1 = new Stack<Integer>();
    Stack<Integer> pole2 = new Stack<Integer>();
    Stack<Integer> pole3 = new Stack<Integer>();

I want to change the stacks based on the user input, and to do so I need to related to the variables pole1, pole2, pole3 (to preform any action, like pole1.pop()).

And this is my question: how can I user the user input – an integer – to relate to the poles, other than multiple if() statements or a switch case statement? Something like pole + "x".pop() ?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T23:42:59+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 11:42 pm

    Good solution

    Don’t make many variables like that.

    You can put them all in an array :

    Stack[] poles = new Stack[3];
    for (int i=0; i<poles.length; i++) poles[i] = new Stack<Integer>();
    

    Then you can access your poles using poles[yourInteger].

    A variant (based on Jeffrey’s comment) :

    List<Stack<Integer>> poles = new ArrayList<Stack<Integer>>();
    for (int i=0; i<poles.size(); i++) poles[i] = new Stack<Integer>();
    

    Then you can access your poles using poles.get(yourInteger).

    Note that as soon as you start to do more complex things on those poles, you’d have to consider embedding them in a class. I personally try to avoid collections of collections or arrays of collections as they tend to be confusing.

    Not very good solution

    You may use a switch :

    public Stack<Integer> getPole(int i) {
        switch(myInteger) {
        case 1:
            return pole1;
        case 2:
            return pole2;
        case 3:
            return pole3
        }
        return null;
    }
    

    use it with

    Stack<Integer> pole = getPole(yourInteger);
    

    Crazy solution

    You may, if you want, access your variables by name using reflexion.

    To do this, you first fetch the Field instances of your class :

    Field stackField = MyClass.class.getField("pole"+myInteger);
    

    Then you have to get the methods of this field’s value, and call them. This will be slow, many LOC and many try/catch.

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