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Not sure how to call it, but say you have a class that looks like this:

class Person
{
    public string Name;
    public IEnumerable<Person> Friends;
}

You then have a person and you want to "unroll" this structure recursively so you end up with a single list of all people without duplicates.

How would you do this? I have already made something that seems to be working, but I am curious to see how others would do it and especially if there is something built-in to Linq you can use in a clever way to solve this little problem :)


Here is my solution:

public static IEnumerable<T> SelectRecursive<T>(this IEnumerable<T> subjects, Func<T, IEnumerable<T>> selector)
{
    // Stop if subjects are null or empty
    if(subjects == null)
        yield break;

    // For each subject
    foreach(var subject in subjects)
    {
        // Yield it
        yield return subject;

        // Then yield all its decendants
        foreach (var decendant in SelectRecursive(selector(subject), selector))
            yield return decendant;
    }
}

Would be used something like this:

var people = somePerson.SelectRecursive(x => x.Friends);
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Looks good to me. – cjk Jan 6 '10 at 10:41
I'm missing something... if you have loops there, will it ever stop? – Kobi Jan 6 '10 at 10:44
@Kobi: This is done by if(!subjects.Any()) yield break; – Oliver Jan 6 '10 at 11:03
@Oliver: No it won't. That will only stop if the subjects list is empty. So I guess I could actually have skipped that part totally since it won't make any difference... – Svish Jan 6 '10 at 11:21
@Kobi: Nope, you are not missing anything. It will never stop :p The stuff I was working with when I made it would never have any cycles so didn't bother doing anything about it. If I needed to, I would probably use a HashSet to keep track of the subjects I had already visited. – Svish Jan 6 '10 at 11:22
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5 Answers

up vote 16 down vote accepted

I don't believe there's anything built into LINQ to do this.

There's a problem with doing it recursively like this - you end up creating a large number of iterators. This can be quite inefficient if the tree is deep. Wes Dyer and Eric Lippert have both blogged about this.

You can remove this inefficiency by removing the direct recursion. For example:

public static IEnumerable<T> SelectRecursive<T>(this IEnumerable<T> subjects,
    Func<T, IEnumerable<T>> selector)
{
    if (subjects == null)
    {
        yield break;
    }

    Queue<T> stillToProcess = new Queue<T>(subjects);

    while (stillToProcess.Count > 0)
    {
        T item = stillToProcess.Dequeue();
        yield return item;
        foreach (T child in selector(item))
        {
            stillToProcess.Enqueue(child);
        }
    }
}

This will also change the iteration order - it becomes breadth-first instead of depth-first; rewriting it to still be depth-first is tricky. I've also changed it to not use Any() - this revised version won't evaluate any sequence more than once, which can be handy in some scenarios. This does have one problem, mind you - it will take more memory, due to the queuing. We could probably alleviate this by storing a queue of iterators instead of items, but I'm not sure offhand... it would certainly be more complicated.

One point to note (also noted by ChrisW while I was looking up the blog posts :) - if you have any cycles in your friends list (i.e. if A has B, and B has A) then you'll recurse forever.

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The cyclicity problem can easily be fixed by associating a visited flag with each node, of course. – Will Vousden Jan 6 '10 at 10:53
@Inquisitor: Only if the type is mutable. Otherwise you could use a HashSet<T> to store items you'd already visited. – Jon Skeet Jan 6 '10 at 10:55
That's exactly the cleverness I was looking for, hehe. Will probably use this instead and maybe add the HashSet to prevent infinite cycles, just for cleaner and safer code. Thanks! – Svish Jan 6 '10 at 11:24
@Inquisitor: You will still have the problem of how to clear the visited flag before starting iteration. Looks like this will require one to visit each node, just to clear this visited flag. Chicken and egg situation. – Tarydon Jan 6 '10 at 12:23
You could just clear the visited flag before you visit each node. No wait... :p – Svish Jan 6 '10 at 12:32
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use the Aggregate extension...

    List<Person> persons = GetPersons(); 
    List<Person> result = new List<Person>(); 
    persons.Aggregate(result,SomeFunc);

    private static List<Person> SomeFunc(List<Person> arg1,Person arg2)
    {
    arg1.Add(arg2)
    arg1.AddRange(arg2.Persons);
    return arg1;
    }
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I was actually thinking about that a while ago. Care to make some example code? – Svish Jan 6 '10 at 13:30
sure... give me 15 minutes... – Chen Kinnrot Jan 6 '10 at 13:42
Interesting. This wouldn't handle cyclic relations though, would it? – Svish Jan 6 '10 at 14:36
you can add a simple if(arg1.Containes(arg2)) – Chen Kinnrot Aug 23 '10 at 6:53
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You could use a non-recursive method like this as well:

  HashSet<Person> GatherAll (Person p) {
     Stack<Person> todo = new Stack<Person> ();
     HashSet<Person> results = new HashSet<Person> ();
     todo.Add (p); results.Add (p);
     while (todo.Count > 0) {
        Person p = todo.Pop (); 
        foreach (Person f in p.Friends) 
           if (results.Add (f)) todo.Add (f);
     }
     return results;
  }

This should handle cycles properly as well. I am starting with a single person, but you could easily expand this to start with a list of persons.

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Recursion is always fun. Perhaps you could simplify your code to:

public static IEnumerable<T> SelectRecursive<T>(this IEnumerable<T> subjects, Func<T, IEnumerable<T>> selector) {
    // Stop if subjects are null or empty 
    if (subjects == null || !subjects.Any())
        return Enumerable.Empty<T>();

    // Gather a list of all (selected) child elements of all subjects
    var subjectChildren = subjects.SelectMany(selector);

    // Jump into the recursion for each of the child elements
    var recursiveChildren = SelectRecursive(subjectChildren, selector);

    // Combine the subjects with all of their (recursive child elements).
    // The union will remove any direct parent-child duplicates.
    // Endless loops due to circular references are however still possible.
    return subjects.Union(recursiveChildren);
}

It will result in less duplicates than your original code. However their might still be duplicates causing an endless loop, the union will only prevent direct parent(s)-child(s) duplicates.

And the order of the items will be different from yours :)

Edit: Changed the last line of code to three statements and added a bit more documentation.

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Interesting... a bit unreadable though, hehe. Ordering doesn't really matter btw, so don't worry about that :p – Svish Jan 6 '10 at 13:29
I've split the single statement into subresults, that might make it a bit easier to read/understand. Basicly I've replaced your for-loops with LINQ. Of course you could go wild, and reduce this method to a single line statement :) – Zyphrax Jan 7 '10 at 10:45
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I found this question as I was looking for and thinking about a similar solution - in my case creating an efficient IEnumerable<Control> for ASP.NET UI controls. The recursive yield I had is fast but I knew that could have extra cost, since it the deeper the control structure the longer it could take. Now I know this is O(n log n).

The solution given here provides some answer but, as discussed in the comments, it does change the order (which the OP did not care about). I realized that to preserve the order as given by the OP and as I needed, neither a simple Queue (as Jon used) nor Stack would work since all the higher objects would by yielded first and then any children after them (or vice-versa).

To resolve this and preserve the order I realized the solution would simply be to put the Enumerator itself on a Stack. To use the OPs original question it would look like this:

public static IEnumerable<T> SelectRecursive<T>(this IEnumerable<T> subjects, Func<T, IEnumerable<T>> selector)
{
    if (subjects == null)
        yield break;

    var stack = new Stack<IEnumerator<T>>();

    stack.Push(subjects.GetEnumerator());

    while (stack.Count > 0)
    {
        var en = stack.Peek();
        if (en.MoveNext())
        {
            var subject = en.Current;
            yield return subject;

            stack.Push(selector(subject).GetEnumerator());
        }
        else 
        {
            stack.Pop();
        }
    }
}

I use stack.Peek here to keep from having to push the same enumerator back on to the stack as this is likely to be the more frequent operation, expecting that enumerator to provide more than one item.

This creates the same number of enumerators as in the recursive version but will like be fewer new objects than putting all the subjects in a queue or stack and continuing to add any descendant subjects. This is O(n) time as each enumerator stands on its own (in the recursive version an implicit call to one MoveNext executes MoveNext on the child enumerators to the current depth in the recursion stack).

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