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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T01:33:35+00:00 2026-05-11T01:33:35+00:00

This is a frequently recurring problem of generating a tree from a flat list

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This is a frequently recurring problem of generating a tree from a flat list. I have caught myself relying on the two-level method described below. I would appreciate anyone suggesting a better approach that could be easily extended to multiple levels.

Description:

  • Resultset is flat and contains a reference to a parentId
  • Root items would have null or zero parentId. In the example code FromDb.ParseInt would handle DBNull by converting it to zero.

 using (SqlDataReader reader = command.ExecuteReader()) {     List<ParentDataObject> results = new List<ParentDataObject>();     ParentDataObject parent = new ParentDataObject();     ParentDataObject previousParent = null;     while (reader.Read())     {         parent.Id = FromDb.ParseInt(reader['ParentId']);
// Parent-level if (previousParent == null || parent.Id != previousParent.Id) { if (previousParent != null) { results.Add(previousParent); // save previously processed ParentDataObject } parent = new ParentDataObject(); // Fill parent object with data... } // Child-level ChildDataObject child = new ChildDataObject; // Fill child with data... parent.Children.Add(child); previousParentId = currentParentId; } // add last parent to results if (previousParent != null) results.Add(previousParent); }

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  1. 2026-05-11T01:33:35+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 1:33 am

    How about something like this? (Pseudo-code)

    class HierarchicalObject {     int ID;     List<HierarchicalObject> Children;     // Other fields }  ...  var roots = new List<HierarchicalObject>(); var index = new Dictionary<int, HierarchicalObject>();  while (reader.Read()) {     HierarchicalObject current = new HierarchicalObject();      // fill in data from record      int parentID = (int)reader['ParentID'];      if (parentID != 0)     {         index[parentID].Children.Add(current);     }     else     {         roots.Add(current);     }      index.Add(current.ID, current);    }  // roots now contains list of root objects; throw out index 

    This assumes all of your objects are homogeneous, rather than having separate parent/child classes, and also that the ordering is such that you won’t read in a child before you read in its parent… but it should work for multiple levels, and you can adapt it as required.

    (If the second assumption is not true, you can read all records into the index first, then go back through the index and fix up roots and children.)

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