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Home/ Questions/Q 538237
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T10:00:37+00:00 2026-05-13T10:00:37+00:00

I’m working in .net 3.5. I have a class A which has a stack

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I’m working in .net 3.5.
I have a class “A” which has a stack and a getter property which, when called, removes the first item in the stack and retrieves the next one.

After initializing the class, I saw that the getter works without being called, and removes the top item in the stack, thus giving me bad results. A breakpoint in the getter did not show anyone passing through it.

When I change the property to a function, the stack is returned ok.

I’d be happy if someone could explain why is that.

Here is the simplified class:

 public class A
    {
        private Stack<string> Urls;

        public A(string title, string[] array)
        {
            Urls = new Stack<string>();
            foreach (string s in array)
            {
                Urls.Push(s);
            }
        }

        public string Url
        {
            get { return Urls.Peek(); }
        }
        public string NextUrl
        {
            get{
            if (Urls.Count > 1)
                { Urls.Pop(); } 
            return Urls.Peek(); 
            };
        }            
    }
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T10:00:38+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:00 am

    Firstly, making a property accessor change the state is generally a bad idea. The most it should do is lazily initialize something – or possibly give a volatile value (like DateTime.Now does).

    Secondly, you’re probably seeing this if you’re running under the debugger – it accesses properties while you’re stepping through code. That would probably explain why the breakpoint wasn’t being hit, too.

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