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Home/ Questions/Q 977129
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T03:51:17+00:00 2026-05-16T03:51:17+00:00

I have the a class Foo like this: class Foo { public int id{get;set;}

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I have the a class Foo like this:

 class Foo
 {
  public int id{get;set;}
  public IEnumerable<Foo> Childs;
       //some other properties
 }

Now I want to process some business logic on a Foo-Object and all it’s children like this:

 public void DoSomeWorkWith(Foo x)
 {
  var firstItem = new {level = 0, item = x};
  var s = new Stack<?>(?); //What type to use?
  s.Push(firstItem);
  while(s.Any())
  {
    var current = s.Pop();
    DoSomeBusiness(current.item);
    DoSomeMoreBusiness(current.item);
    Log(current.level, current.item.id);
    foreach(Foo child in current.item.Childs)
       s.Push(new {level = current.level + 1, item = child});
   }
}

I need to keep track of the (relative) level/depth of the childs.
How do I create a Stack<T> for the anonymous type? Of course I could create a simple class instead of the anonymous type (or a more complicated recursive function), but how to solve this problem without an additional class?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T03:51:18+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:51 am

    You could just put it into a method like this:

    public Stack<T> CreateStackWithInitialItem<T>(T initialItem)
    {
        var s = new Stack<T>();
        s.Push(initialItem);
        return s;
    }
    

    and then use it like that:

    public void DoSomeWorkWith(Foo x)
    {
        var s = CreateStackWithInitialItem(new {level = 0, item = x});
        while(s.Any())
        {
            ...
        }
    }
    
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