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Home/ Questions/Q 281937
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T05:14:45+00:00 2026-05-12T05:14:45+00:00

I realize that you cannot iterate over a Dictionary in C# and edit the

  • 0

I realize that you cannot iterate over a Dictionary in C# and edit the underlying Dictionary as in the following example:

Dictionary<Resource, double> totalCost = new Dictionary<Resource, double>();
// Populate the Dictionary in here - (not showing code).    
foreach (Resource resource in totalCost.Keys)
{
     totalCost[resource] = 5;
}

One way I see to fix this is to make a List backed by the Dictionary’s keys, like this:

Dictionary<Resource, double> totalCost = new Dictionary<Resource, double>();
// Populate the Dictionary in here - (not showing code).    
foreach (Resource resource in new List(totalCost.Keys))
{
     totalCost[resource] = 5;
}

Because I’m not editing the keys themselves, is there any reason that this should not be done or that it’s bad to choose this as a solution. (I realize if I was editing those keys, this could cause a lot of problems.)

Thank you.

Edit: Fixed my code example. Sorry about that.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T05:14:45+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:14 am

    in your examples it doesn’t look to me like you’re editing the dictionary values (or keys)?

    In general your solution looks fine, you could do it with a bit less code like this:

    List<double> total = new List<double>();
    foreach (AKeyObject key in aDictionary.Keys.ToList())
    {
       for (int i = 0; i < aDictionary[key].Count; i++)
       {
          total[i] += aDictionary[key][i];
       }
    }
    
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