Fibonacci sequence: Recursion depth excess - recursion

Given the function to generate fibonacci numbers:
def fibonacci(x, memory = {0:0, 1:1}):
if x not in memory:
memory[x] = fibonacci(x-1, memory)+fibonacci(x-2, memory)
return memory[x]
When I try some arbitrarily large number, say 4000th fibonacci number, I get an error:
RuntimeError: maximum recursion depth exceeded
What is the error caused by? What can be done as a work around without sacrificing the efficiency? I prefer this to iteration, since by iterating, calculating even the 50th position takes astronomically long for a computer (read: half a minute).

As the others have mentioned you have hit the stack memory limit. You usually have a maximum of 50-100 maximum nested recursive calls before you hit this limit.
I think you might have a misconception about iteration (unrolling recursive functions)
def fib():
a=0
b=1;
c=1;
for x in range(4000):
c = a + b;
a = b;
b = c;
print c;
fib();
There is no way this function would take longer than your recursive one.

Iteration is lot better than recursion in my opinion. Because
Iteration is lot more easily readable and traceable than recursion.
You can use concepts such as Generators to reduce the memory load that may not be feasible with recursive functions.
As for what is Recursion Limit, you can see here. It gives a basic explanation of what and why recursion limit is there. As shown there, you can give sys.setrecursionlimit to any value you desired.
Using iterator, this can be used for fibonacci series:
def fib(a, b):
return b, a+b
for i in range(20):
if i in (0, 1):
print i
else:
print a
a, b = fib(a, b)

I think you hit the recursion limit. Here is a link to a similar post, which might help. I would recommend that you use iteration, but I also came across this code to increase the stack size, but have not tested it:
import sys
sys.setrecursionlimit(10000) # change the '10000' to something that works

Related

Recursion Time Complexity Definition Confusion

The time complexity of a recursive algorithm is said to be
Given a recursion algorithm, its time complexity O(T) is typically
the product of the number of recursion invocations (denoted as R)
and the time complexity of calculation (denoted as O(s))
that incurs along with each recursion
O(T) = R * O(s)
Looking at a recursive function:
void algo(n){
if (n == 0) return; // base case just to not have stack overflow
for(i = 0; i < n; i++);// to do O(n) work
algo(n/2);
}
According to the definition above I may say that, the time complexity is, R is logn times and O(s) is n. So the result should be n logn where as with mathmetical induction it is proved that the result in o(n).
Please do not prove the induction method. I am asking why the given definition does not work with my approach.
Great question! This hits at two different ways of accounting for the amount of work that's done in a recursive call chain.
The original strategy that you described for computing the amount of work done in a recursive call - multiply the work done per call by the number of calls - has an implicit assumption buried within it. Namely, this assumes that every recursive call does the same amount of work. If that is indeed the case, then you can determine the total work done as the product of the number of calls and the work per call.
However, this strategy doesn't usually work if the amount of work done per call varies as a function of the arguments to the call. After all, we can't talk about multiplying "the" amount of work done by a call by the number of calls if there isn't a single value representing how much work is done!
A more general strategy for determining how much work is done by a recursive call chain is to add up the amount of work done by each individual recursive call. In the case of the function that you've outlined above, the work done by the first call is n. The second call does n/2 work, because the amount of work it does is linear in its argument. The third call does n/4 work, the fourth n/8 work, etc. This means that the total work done is bounded by
n + n/2 + n/4 + n/8 + n/16 + ...
= n(1 + 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + 1/16 + ...)
≤ 2n,
which is where the tighter O(n) bound comes from.
As a note, the idea of "add up all the work done by all the calls" is completely equivalent to "multiply the amount of work done per call by the number of calls" in the specific case where the amount of work done by each call is the same. Do you see why?
Alternatively, if you're okay getting a conservative upper bound on the amount of work done by a recursive call chain, you can multiply the number of calls by the maximum work done by any one call. That will never underestimate the total, but it won't always give you the right bound. That's what's happening here in the example you've listed - each call does at most n work, and there are O(log n) calls, so the total work is indeed O(n log n). That just doesn't happen to be a tight bound.
A quick note - I don't think it would be appropriate to call the strategy of multiplying the total work done by the number of calls the "definition" of the amount of work done by a recursive call chain. As mentioned above, that's more of a "strategy for determining the work done" than a formal definition. If anything, I'd argue that the correct formal definition would be "the sum of the amounts of work done by each individual recursive calls," since that more accurately accounts for how much total time will be spent.
Hope this helps!
I think you are trying to find information about master theorem which is what is used to prove the time complexity of recursive algorithms.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_theorem_(analysis_of_algorithms)
Also, you usually can't determine an algorithms runtime just from looking at it, especially recursive ones. That's why your quick analysis is different than the proof by induction.

Quicksort and tail recursive optimization

In Introduction to Algorithms p169 it talks about using tail recursion for Quicksort.
The original Quicksort algorithm earlier in the chapter is (in pseudo-code)
Quicksort(A, p, r)
{
if (p < r)
{
q: <- Partition(A, p, r)
Quicksort(A, p, q)
Quicksort(A, q+1, r)
}
}
The optimized version using tail recursion is as follows
Quicksort(A, p, r)
{
while (p < r)
{
q: <- Partition(A, p, r)
Quicksort(A, p, q)
p: <- q+1
}
}
Where Partition sorts the array according to a pivot.
The difference is that the second algorithm only calls Quicksort once to sort the LHS.
Can someone explain to me why the 1st algorithm could cause a stack overflow, whereas the second wouldn't? Or am I misunderstanding the book.
First let's start with a brief, probably not accurate but still valid, definition of what stack overflow is.
As you probably know right now there are two different kind of memory which are implemented in too different data structures: Heap and Stack.
In terms of size, the Heap is bigger than the stack, and to keep it simple let's say that every time a function call is made a new environment(local variables, parameters, etc.) is created on the stack. So given that and the fact that stack's size is limited, if you make too many function calls you will run out of space hence you will have a stack overflow.
The problem with recursion is that, since you are creating at least one environment on the stack per iteration, then you would be occupying a lot of space in the limited stack very quickly, so stack overflow are commonly associated with recursion calls.
So there is this thing called Tail recursion call optimization that will reuse the same environment every time a recursion call is made and so the space occupied in the stack is constant, preventing the stack overflow issue.
Now, there are some rules in order to perform a tail call optimization. First, each call most be complete and by that I mean that the function should be able to give a result at any moment if you interrupts the execution, in SICP
this is called an iterative process even when the function is recursive.
If you analyze your first example, you will see that each iteration is defined by two recursive calls, which means that if you stop the execution at any time you won't be able to give a partial result because you the result depends of those calls to be finished, in this scenario you can't reuse the stack environment because the total information is split between all those recursive calls.
However, the second example doesn't have that problem, A is constant and the state of p and r can be locally determined, so since all the information to keep going is there then TCO can be applied.
The essence of the tail recursion optimization is that there is no recursion when the program is actually executed. When the compiler or interpreter is able to kick TRO in, it means that it will essentially figure out how to rewrite your recursively-defined algorithm into a simple iterative process with the stack not used to store nested function invocations.
The first code snippet can't be TR-optimized because there are 2 recursive calls in it.
Tail recursion by itself is not enough. The algorithm with the while loop can still use O(N) stack space, reducing it to O(log(N)) is left as exercise in that section of CLRS.
Assume we are working in a language with array slices and tail call optimization. Consider the difference between these two algorithms:
Bad:
Quicksort(arraySlice) {
if (arraySlice.length > 1) {
slices = Partition(arraySlice)
(smallerSlice, largerSlice) = sortBySize(slices)
Quicksort(largerSlice) // Not a tail call, requires a stack frame until it returns.
Quicksort(smallerSlice) // Tail call, can replace the old stack frame.
}
}
Good:
Quicksort(arraySlice) {
if (arraySlice.length > 1){
slices = Partition(arraySlice)
(smallerSlice, largerSlice) = sortBySize(slices)
Quicksort(smallerSlice) // Not a tail call, requires a stack frame until it returns.
Quicksort(largerSlice) // Tail call, can replace the old stack frame.
}
}
The second one is guarenteed to never need more than log2(length) stack frames because smallerSlice is less than half as long as arraySlice. But for the first one, the inequality is reversed and it will always need more than or equal to log2(length) stack frames, and can require O(N) stack frames in the worst case where smallerslice always has length 1.
If you don't keep track of which slice is smaller or larger, you will have similar worst cases to the first overflowing case, even though it will require O(log(n)) stack frames on average. If you always sort the smaller slice first, you will never need more than log_2(length) stack frames.
If you are using a language that doesn't have tail call optimization, you can write the second (not stack-blowing) version as:
Quicksort(arraySlice) {
while (arraySlice.length > 1) {
slices = Partition(arraySlice)
(smallerSlice, arraySlice) = sortBySize(slices)
Quicksort(smallerSlice) // Still not a tail call, requires a stack frame until it returns.
}
}
Another thing worth noting is that if you are implementing something like Introsort which changes to Heapsort if the recursion depth exceeds some number proportional to log(N), you will never hit the O(N) worst case stack memory usage of quicksort, so you technically don't need to do this. Doing this optimization (popping smaller slices first) still improves the constant factor of the O(log(N)) though, so it is strongly recommended.
Well, the most obvious observation would be:
Most common stack overflow problem - definition
The most common cause of stack overflow is excessively deep or infinite recursion.
The second uses less deep recursion than the first (n branches per call instead of n^2) hence it is less likely to cause a stack overflow..
(so lower complexity means less chance to cause a stack overflow)
But somebody would have to add why the second can never cause a stack overflow while the first can.
source
Well If you consider the complexity of the two methods the first method obviously has more complexity than the second since it calls Recursion on both LHS and RHS as a result there are more chances of getting stack overflow
Note: That doesnt mean that there are absolutely no chances of getting SO in second method
In the function 2 that you shared, Tail Call elimination is implemented. Before proceeding further let us understand what is tail recursion function?. If the last statement in the code is the recursive call and does do anything after that, then it is called tail recursive function. So the first function is a tail recursion function. For such a function with some changes in the code one can remove the last recursion call like you showed in function 2 which performs the same work as function 1. This process is called tail recursion optimization or tail call elimination and following are the result of it
Optimizing in terms of auxiliary space
Optimizing in terms of recursion call overhead
Last recursive call is eliminated by using the while loop. The good thing is that for function 2, no auxiliary space is used for the right call as its recursion is eliminated using p: <- q+1 and the overall function does not have recursion call overhead. So whatever way partition happens maximum space needed is theta(log n)

Big O of Recursive Methods

I'm having difficulty determining the big O of simple recursive methods. I can't wrap my head around what happens when a method is called multiple times. I would be more specific about my areas of confusion, but at the moment I'm trying to answer some hw questions, and in lieu of not wanting to cheat, I ask that anyone responding to this post come up with a simple recursive method and provide a simple explanation of the big O of said method. (Preferably in Java... a language I'm learning.)
Thank you.
You can define the order recursively as well. For instance, let's say you have a function f. To calculate f(n) takes k steps. Now you want to calculate f(n+1). Lets say f(n+1) calls f(n) once, then f(n+1) takes k + some constant steps. Each invocation will take some constant steps extra, so this method is O(n).
Now look at another example. Lets say you implement fibonacci naively by adding the two previous results:
fib(n) = { return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) }
Now lets say you can calculate fib(n-2) and fib(n-1) both in about k steps. To calculate fib(n) you need k+k = 2*k steps. Now lets say you want to calculate fib(n+1). So you need twice as much steps as for fib(n-1). So this seems to be O(2^N)
Admittedly, this is not very formal, but hopefully this way you can get a bit of a feel.
You might want to refer to the master theorem for finding the big O of recursive methods. Here is the wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_theorem
You want to think of a recursive problem like a tree. Then, consider each level of the tree and the amount of work required. Problems will generally fall into 3 categories, root heavy (first iteration >> rest of tree), balanced (each level has equal amounts of work), leaf heavy (last iteration >> rest of tree).
Taking merge sort as an example:
define mergeSort(list toSort):
if(length of toSort <= 1):
return toSort
list left = toSort from [0, length of toSort/2)
list right = toSort from [length of toSort/2, length of toSort)
merge(mergeSort(left), mergeSort(right))
You can see that each call of mergeSort in turn calls 2 more mergeSorts of 1/2 the original length. We know that the merge procedure will take time proportional to the number of values being merged.
The recurrence relationship is then T(n) = 2*T(n/2)+O(n). The two comes from the 2 calls and the n/2 is from each call having only half the number of elements. However, at each level there are the same number of elements n which need to be merged, so the constant work at each level is O(n).
We know the work is evenly distributed (O(n) each depth) and the tree is log_2(n) deep, so the big O of the recursive function is O(n*log(n)).

Need to make this recursive algorithm iterative due to stack overflow

Basically I have this huge function in Python (which I've simplified to the bare basics)
def rec(a,b):
if stoppingCondition==True: return 1
key=(a,b)
if key in memo: return memo[key]
if b==side condition:
memo[key]=rec(a+1,b) #RECURSIVE CALL
return memo[key]
total=0
for d in D:
if condition1==True:
b=some process 1
total+=rec(a+1,b) #RECURSIVE CALL
elif condition2==True:
for x,y in d:
if (some break condition==True): break
else: #only gets called if break didnt happen
b=some process 2
total+=rec(a+1,b) #RECURSIVE CALL
memo[key]=total
return memo[key]
And I am having a heck of a time making it iterative because it blows up for deeper recursive levels. I've already read up other threads about converting to loops and stacks and whatnot but I just can't get any of it working.
You can always calculate rec(a, b) for all b, starting at the highest a and decreasing in a simple loop without recursion. Now, this solution is not viable if the traversal of all possible calls to rec() is sparse, since it will introduce a lot of unnecessary calculations.
Another solution is to try to implement tail-call optimization in Python. I haven't tried it, but you might want to test this decorator.
A less elegant solution is to increase the recursion limit to fit your need:
import sys
sys.setrecursionlimit(10000)

What is recursion and when should I use it?

Locked. This question and its answers are locked because the question is off-topic but has historical significance. It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions.
One of the topics that seems to come up regularly on mailing lists and online discussions is the merits (or lack thereof) of doing a Computer Science Degree. An argument that seems to come up time and again for the negative party is that they have been coding for some number of years and they have never used recursion.
So the question is:
What is recursion?
When would I use recursion?
Why don't people use recursion?
There are a number of good explanations of recursion in this thread, this answer is about why you shouldn't use it in most languages.* In the majority of major imperative language implementations (i.e. every major implementation of C, C++, Basic, Python, Ruby,Java, and C#) iteration is vastly preferable to recursion.
To see why, walk through the steps that the above languages use to call a function:
space is carved out on the stack for the function's arguments and local variables
the function's arguments are copied into this new space
control jumps to the function
the function's code runs
the function's result is copied into a return value
the stack is rewound to its previous position
control jumps back to where the function was called
Doing all of these steps takes time, usually a little bit more than it takes to iterate through a loop. However, the real problem is in step #1. When many programs start, they allocate a single chunk of memory for their stack, and when they run out of that memory (often, but not always due to recursion), the program crashes due to a stack overflow.
So in these languages recursion is slower and it makes you vulnerable to crashing. There are still some arguments for using it though. In general, code written recursively is shorter and a bit more elegant, once you know how to read it.
There is a technique that language implementers can use called tail call optimization which can eliminate some classes of stack overflow. Put succinctly: if a function's return expression is simply the result of a function call, then you don't need to add a new level onto the stack, you can reuse the current one for the function being called. Regrettably, few imperative language-implementations have tail-call optimization built in.
* I love recursion. My favorite static language doesn't use loops at all, recursion is the only way to do something repeatedly. I just don't think that recursion is generally a good idea in languages that aren't tuned for it.
** By the way Mario, the typical name for your ArrangeString function is "join", and I'd be surprised if your language of choice doesn't already have an implementation of it.
Simple english example of recursion.
A child couldn't sleep, so her mother told her a story about a little frog,
who couldn't sleep, so the frog's mother told her a story about a little bear,
who couldn't sleep, so the bear's mother told her a story about a little weasel...
who fell asleep.
...and the little bear fell asleep;
...and the little frog fell asleep;
...and the child fell asleep.
In the most basic computer science sense, recursion is a function that calls itself. Say you have a linked list structure:
struct Node {
Node* next;
};
And you want to find out how long a linked list is you can do this with recursion:
int length(const Node* list) {
if (!list->next) {
return 1;
} else {
return 1 + length(list->next);
}
}
(This could of course be done with a for loop as well, but is useful as an illustration of the concept)
Whenever a function calls itself, creating a loop, then that's recursion. As with anything there are good uses and bad uses for recursion.
The most simple example is tail recursion where the very last line of the function is a call to itself:
int FloorByTen(int num)
{
if (num % 10 == 0)
return num;
else
return FloorByTen(num-1);
}
However, this is a lame, almost pointless example because it can easily be replaced by more efficient iteration. After all, recursion suffers from function call overhead, which in the example above could be substantial compared to the operation inside the function itself.
So the whole reason to do recursion rather than iteration should be to take advantage of the call stack to do some clever stuff. For example, if you call a function multiple times with different parameters inside the same loop then that's a way to accomplish branching. A classic example is the Sierpinski triangle.
You can draw one of those very simply with recursion, where the call stack branches in 3 directions:
private void BuildVertices(double x, double y, double len)
{
if (len > 0.002)
{
mesh.Positions.Add(new Point3D(x, y + len, -len));
mesh.Positions.Add(new Point3D(x - len, y - len, -len));
mesh.Positions.Add(new Point3D(x + len, y - len, -len));
len *= 0.5;
BuildVertices(x, y + len, len);
BuildVertices(x - len, y - len, len);
BuildVertices(x + len, y - len, len);
}
}
If you attempt to do the same thing with iteration I think you'll find it takes a lot more code to accomplish.
Other common use cases might include traversing hierarchies, e.g. website crawlers, directory comparisons, etc.
Conclusion
In practical terms, recursion makes the most sense whenever you need iterative branching.
Recursion is a method of solving problems based on the divide and conquer mentality.
The basic idea is that you take the original problem and divide it into smaller (more easily solved) instances of itself, solve those smaller instances (usually by using the same algorithm again) and then reassemble them into the final solution.
The canonical example is a routine to generate the Factorial of n. The Factorial of n is calculated by multiplying all of the numbers between 1 and n. An iterative solution in C# looks like this:
public int Fact(int n)
{
int fact = 1;
for( int i = 2; i <= n; i++)
{
fact = fact * i;
}
return fact;
}
There's nothing surprising about the iterative solution and it should make sense to anyone familiar with C#.
The recursive solution is found by recognising that the nth Factorial is n * Fact(n-1). Or to put it another way, if you know what a particular Factorial number is you can calculate the next one. Here is the recursive solution in C#:
public int FactRec(int n)
{
if( n < 2 )
{
return 1;
}
return n * FactRec( n - 1 );
}
The first part of this function is known as a Base Case (or sometimes Guard Clause) and is what prevents the algorithm from running forever. It just returns the value 1 whenever the function is called with a value of 1 or less. The second part is more interesting and is known as the Recursive Step. Here we call the same method with a slightly modified parameter (we decrement it by 1) and then multiply the result with our copy of n.
When first encountered this can be kind of confusing so it's instructive to examine how it works when run. Imagine that we call FactRec(5). We enter the routine, are not picked up by the base case and so we end up like this:
// In FactRec(5)
return 5 * FactRec( 5 - 1 );
// which is
return 5 * FactRec(4);
If we re-enter the method with the parameter 4 we are again not stopped by the guard clause and so we end up at:
// In FactRec(4)
return 4 * FactRec(3);
If we substitute this return value into the return value above we get
// In FactRec(5)
return 5 * (4 * FactRec(3));
This should give you a clue as to how the final solution is arrived at so we'll fast track and show each step on the way down:
return 5 * (4 * FactRec(3));
return 5 * (4 * (3 * FactRec(2)));
return 5 * (4 * (3 * (2 * FactRec(1))));
return 5 * (4 * (3 * (2 * (1))));
That final substitution happens when the base case is triggered. At this point we have a simple algrebraic formula to solve which equates directly to the definition of Factorials in the first place.
It's instructive to note that every call into the method results in either a base case being triggered or a call to the same method where the parameters are closer to a base case (often called a recursive call). If this is not the case then the method will run forever.
Recursion is solving a problem with a function that calls itself. A good example of this is a factorial function. Factorial is a math problem where factorial of 5, for example, is 5 * 4 * 3 * 2 * 1. This function solves this in C# for positive integers (not tested - there may be a bug).
public int Factorial(int n)
{
if (n <= 1)
return 1;
return n * Factorial(n - 1);
}
Recursion refers to a method which solves a problem by solving a smaller version of the problem and then using that result plus some other computation to formulate the answer to the original problem. Often times, in the process of solving the smaller version, the method will solve a yet smaller version of the problem, and so on, until it reaches a "base case" which is trivial to solve.
For instance, to calculate a factorial for the number X, one can represent it as X times the factorial of X-1. Thus, the method "recurses" to find the factorial of X-1, and then multiplies whatever it got by X to give a final answer. Of course, to find the factorial of X-1, it'll first calculate the factorial of X-2, and so on. The base case would be when X is 0 or 1, in which case it knows to return 1 since 0! = 1! = 1.
Consider an old, well known problem:
In mathematics, the greatest common divisor (gcd) … of two or more non-zero integers, is the largest positive integer that divides the numbers without a remainder.
The definition of gcd is surprisingly simple:
where mod is the modulo operator (that is, the remainder after integer division).
In English, this definition says the greatest common divisor of any number and zero is that number, and the greatest common divisor of two numbers m and n is the greatest common divisor of n and the remainder after dividing m by n.
If you'd like to know why this works, see the Wikipedia article on the Euclidean algorithm.
Let's compute gcd(10, 8) as an example. Each step is equal to the one just before it:
gcd(10, 8)
gcd(10, 10 mod 8)
gcd(8, 2)
gcd(8, 8 mod 2)
gcd(2, 0)
2
In the first step, 8 does not equal zero, so the second part of the definition applies. 10 mod 8 = 2 because 8 goes into 10 once with a remainder of 2. At step 3, the second part applies again, but this time 8 mod 2 = 0 because 2 divides 8 with no remainder. At step 5, the second argument is 0, so the answer is 2.
Did you notice that gcd appears on both the left and right sides of the equals sign? A mathematician would say this definition is recursive because the expression you're defining recurs inside its definition.
Recursive definitions tend to be elegant. For example, a recursive definition for the sum of a list is
sum l =
if empty(l)
return 0
else
return head(l) + sum(tail(l))
where head is the first element in a list and tail is the rest of the list. Note that sum recurs inside its definition at the end.
Maybe you'd prefer the maximum value in a list instead:
max l =
if empty(l)
error
elsif length(l) = 1
return head(l)
else
tailmax = max(tail(l))
if head(l) > tailmax
return head(l)
else
return tailmax
You might define multiplication of non-negative integers recursively to turn it into a series of additions:
a * b =
if b = 0
return 0
else
return a + (a * (b - 1))
If that bit about transforming multiplication into a series of additions doesn't make sense, try expanding a few simple examples to see how it works.
Merge sort has a lovely recursive definition:
sort(l) =
if empty(l) or length(l) = 1
return l
else
(left,right) = split l
return merge(sort(left), sort(right))
Recursive definitions are all around if you know what to look for. Notice how all of these definitions have very simple base cases, e.g., gcd(m, 0) = m. The recursive cases whittle away at the problem to get down to the easy answers.
With this understanding, you can now appreciate the other algorithms in Wikipedia's article on recursion!
A function that calls itself
When a function can be (easily) decomposed into a simple operation plus the same function on some smaller portion of the problem. I should say, rather, that this makes it a good candidate for recursion.
They do!
The canonical example is the factorial which looks like:
int fact(int a)
{
if(a==1)
return 1;
return a*fact(a-1);
}
In general, recursion isn't necessarily fast (function call overhead tends to be high because recursive functions tend to be small, see above) and can suffer from some problems (stack overflow anyone?). Some say they tend to be hard to get 'right' in non-trivial cases but I don't really buy into that. In some situations, recursion makes the most sense and is the most elegant and clear way to write a particular function. It should be noted that some languages favor recursive solutions and optimize them much more (LISP comes to mind).
A recursive function is one which calls itself. The most common reason I've found to use it is traversing a tree structure. For example, if I have a TreeView with checkboxes (think installation of a new program, "choose features to install" page), I might want a "check all" button which would be something like this (pseudocode):
function cmdCheckAllClick {
checkRecursively(TreeView1.RootNode);
}
function checkRecursively(Node n) {
n.Checked = True;
foreach ( n.Children as child ) {
checkRecursively(child);
}
}
So you can see that the checkRecursively first checks the node which it is passed, then calls itself for each of that node's children.
You do need to be a bit careful with recursion. If you get into an infinite recursive loop, you will get a Stack Overflow exception :)
I can't think of a reason why people shouldn't use it, when appropriate. It is useful in some circumstances, and not in others.
I think that because it's an interesting technique, some coders perhaps end up using it more often than they should, without real justification. This has given recursion a bad name in some circles.
Recursion is an expression directly or indirectly referencing itself.
Consider recursive acronyms as a simple example:
GNU stands for GNU's Not Unix
PHP stands for PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor
YAML stands for YAML Ain't Markup Language
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Recursion works best with what I like to call "fractal problems", where you're dealing with a big thing that's made of smaller versions of that big thing, each of which is an even smaller version of the big thing, and so on. If you ever have to traverse or search through something like a tree or nested identical structures, you've got a problem that might be a good candidate for recursion.
People avoid recursion for a number of reasons:
Most people (myself included) cut their programming teeth on procedural or object-oriented programming as opposed to functional programming. To such people, the iterative approach (typically using loops) feels more natural.
Those of us who cut our programming teeth on procedural or object-oriented programming have often been told to avoid recursion because it's error prone.
We're often told that recursion is slow. Calling and returning from a routine repeatedly involves a lot of stack pushing and popping, which is slower than looping. I think some languages handle this better than others, and those languages are most likely not those where the dominant paradigm is procedural or object-oriented.
For at least a couple of programming languages I've used, I remember hearing recommendations not to use recursion if it gets beyond a certain depth because its stack isn't that deep.
A recursive statement is one in which you define the process of what to do next as a combination of the inputs and what you have already done.
For example, take factorial:
factorial(6) = 6*5*4*3*2*1
But it's easy to see factorial(6) also is:
6 * factorial(5) = 6*(5*4*3*2*1).
So generally:
factorial(n) = n*factorial(n-1)
Of course, the tricky thing about recursion is that if you want to define things in terms of what you have already done, there needs to be some place to start.
In this example, we just make a special case by defining factorial(1) = 1.
Now we see it from the bottom up:
factorial(6) = 6*factorial(5)
= 6*5*factorial(4)
= 6*5*4*factorial(3) = 6*5*4*3*factorial(2) = 6*5*4*3*2*factorial(1) = 6*5*4*3*2*1
Since we defined factorial(1) = 1, we reach the "bottom".
Generally speaking, recursive procedures have two parts:
1) The recursive part, which defines some procedure in terms of new inputs combined with what you've "already done" via the same procedure. (i.e. factorial(n) = n*factorial(n-1))
2) A base part, which makes sure that the process doesn't repeat forever by giving it some place to start (i.e. factorial(1) = 1)
It can be a bit confusing to get your head around at first, but just look at a bunch of examples and it should all come together. If you want a much deeper understanding of the concept, study mathematical induction. Also, be aware that some languages optimize for recursive calls while others do not. It's pretty easy to make insanely slow recursive functions if you're not careful, but there are also techniques to make them performant in most cases.
Hope this helps...
I like this definition:
In recursion, a routine solves a small part of a problem itself, divides the problem into smaller pieces, and then calls itself to solve each of the smaller pieces.
I also like Steve McConnells discussion of recursion in Code Complete where he criticises the examples used in Computer Science books on Recursion.
Don't use recursion for factorials or Fibonacci numbers
One problem with
computer-science textbooks is that
they present silly examples of
recursion. The typical examples are
computing a factorial or computing a
Fibonacci sequence. Recursion is a
powerful tool, and it's really dumb to
use it in either of those cases. If a
programmer who worked for me used
recursion to compute a factorial, I'd
hire someone else.
I thought this was a very interesting point to raise and may be a reason why recursion is often misunderstood.
EDIT:
This was not a dig at Dav's answer - I had not seen that reply when I posted this
1.)
A method is recursive if it can call itself; either directly:
void f() {
... f() ...
}
or indirectly:
void f() {
... g() ...
}
void g() {
... f() ...
}
2.) When to use recursion
Q: Does using recursion usually make your code faster?
A: No.
Q: Does using recursion usually use less memory?
A: No.
Q: Then why use recursion?
A: It sometimes makes your code much simpler!
3.) People use recursion only when it is very complex to write iterative code. For example, tree traversal techniques like preorder, postorder can be made both iterative and recursive. But usually we use recursive because of its simplicity.
Here's a simple example: how many elements in a set. (there are better ways to count things, but this is a nice simple recursive example.)
First, we need two rules:
if the set is empty, the count of items in the set is zero (duh!).
if the set is not empty, the count is one plus the number of items in the set after one item is removed.
Suppose you have a set like this: [x x x]. let's count how many items there are.
the set is [x x x] which is not empty, so we apply rule 2. the number of items is one plus the number of items in [x x] (i.e. we removed an item).
the set is [x x], so we apply rule 2 again: one + number of items in [x].
the set is [x], which still matches rule 2: one + number of items in [].
Now the set is [], which matches rule 1: the count is zero!
Now that we know the answer in step 4 (0), we can solve step 3 (1 + 0)
Likewise, now that we know the answer in step 3 (1), we can solve step 2 (1 + 1)
And finally now that we know the answer in step 2 (2), we can solve step 1 (1 + 2) and get the count of items in [x x x], which is 3. Hooray!
We can represent this as:
count of [x x x] = 1 + count of [x x]
= 1 + (1 + count of [x])
= 1 + (1 + (1 + count of []))
= 1 + (1 + (1 + 0)))
= 1 + (1 + (1))
= 1 + (2)
= 3
When applying a recursive solution, you usually have at least 2 rules:
the basis, the simple case which states what happens when you have "used up" all of your data. This is usually some variation of "if you are out of data to process, your answer is X"
the recursive rule, which states what happens if you still have data. This is usually some kind of rule that says "do something to make your data set smaller, and reapply your rules to the smaller data set."
If we translate the above to pseudocode, we get:
numberOfItems(set)
if set is empty
return 0
else
remove 1 item from set
return 1 + numberOfItems(set)
There's a lot more useful examples (traversing a tree, for example) which I'm sure other people will cover.
Well, that's a pretty decent definition you have. And wikipedia has a good definition too. So I'll add another (probably worse) definition for you.
When people refer to "recursion", they're usually talking about a function they've written which calls itself repeatedly until it is done with its work. Recursion can be helpful when traversing hierarchies in data structures.
An example: A recursive definition of a staircase is:
A staircase consists of:
- a single step and a staircase (recursion)
- or only a single step (termination)
To recurse on a solved problem: do nothing, you're done.
To recurse on an open problem: do the next step, then recurse on the rest.
In plain English:
Assume you can do 3 things:
Take one apple
Write down tally marks
Count tally marks
You have a lot of apples in front of you on a table and you want to know how many apples there are.
start
Is the table empty?
yes: Count the tally marks and cheer like it's your birthday!
no: Take 1 apple and put it aside
Write down a tally mark
goto start
The process of repeating the same thing till you are done is called recursion.
I hope this is the "plain english" answer you are looking for!
A recursive function is a function that contains a call to itself. A recursive struct is a struct that contains an instance of itself. You can combine the two as a recursive class. The key part of a recursive item is that it contains an instance/call of itself.
Consider two mirrors facing each other. We've seen the neat infinity effect they make. Each reflection is an instance of a mirror, which is contained within another instance of a mirror, etc. The mirror containing a reflection of itself is recursion.
A binary search tree is a good programming example of recursion. The structure is recursive with each Node containing 2 instances of a Node. Functions to work on a binary search tree are also recursive.
This is an old question, but I want to add an answer from logistical point of view (i.e not from algorithm correctness point of view or performance point of view).
I use Java for work, and Java doesn't support nested function. As such, if I want to do recursion, I might have to define an external function (which exists only because my code bumps against Java's bureaucratic rule), or I might have to refactor the code altogether (which I really hate to do).
Thus, I often avoid recursion, and use stack operation instead, because recursion itself is essentially a stack operation.
You want to use it anytime you have a tree structure. It is very useful in reading XML.
Recursion as it applies to programming is basically calling a function from inside its own definition (inside itself), with different parameters so as to accomplish a task.
"If I have a hammer, make everything look like a nail."
Recursion is a problem-solving strategy for huge problems, where at every step just, "turn 2 small things into one bigger thing," each time with the same hammer.
Example
Suppose your desk is covered with a disorganized mess of 1024 papers. How do you make one neat, clean stack of papers from the mess, using recursion?
Divide: Spread all the sheets out, so you have just one sheet in each "stack".
Conquer:
Go around, putting each sheet on top of one other sheet. You now have stacks of 2.
Go around, putting each 2-stack on top of another 2-stack. You now have stacks of 4.
Go around, putting each 4-stack on top of another 4-stack. You now have stacks of 8.
... on and on ...
You now have one huge stack of 1024 sheets!
Notice that this is pretty intuitive, aside from counting everything (which isn't strictly necessary). You might not go all the way down to 1-sheet stacks, in reality, but you could and it would still work. The important part is the hammer: With your arms, you can always put one stack on top of the other to make a bigger stack, and it doesn't matter (within reason) how big either stack is.
Recursion is the process where a method call iself to be able to perform a certain task. It reduces redundency of code. Most recurssive functions or methods must have a condifiton to break the recussive call i.e. stop it from calling itself if a condition is met - this prevents the creating of an infinite loop. Not all functions are suited to be used recursively.
hey, sorry if my opinion agrees with someone, I'm just trying to explain recursion in plain english.
suppose you have three managers - Jack, John and Morgan.
Jack manages 2 programmers, John - 3, and Morgan - 5.
you are going to give every manager 300$ and want to know what would it cost.
The answer is obvious - but what if 2 of Morgan-s employees are also managers?
HERE comes the recursion.
you start from the top of the hierarchy. the summery cost is 0$.
you start with Jack,
Then check if he has any managers as employees. if you find any of them are, check if they have any managers as employees and so on. Add 300$ to the summery cost every time you find a manager.
when you are finished with Jack, go to John, his employees and then to Morgan.
You'll never know, how much cycles will you go before getting an answer, though you know how many managers you have and how many Budget can you spend.
Recursion is a tree, with branches and leaves, called parents and children respectively.
When you use a recursion algorithm, you more or less consciously are building a tree from the data.
In plain English, recursion means to repeat someting again and again.
In programming one example is of calling the function within itself .
Look on the following example of calculating factorial of a number:
public int fact(int n)
{
if (n==0) return 1;
else return n*fact(n-1)
}
Any algorithm exhibits structural recursion on a datatype if basically consists of a switch-statement with a case for each case of the datatype.
for example, when you are working on a type
tree = null
| leaf(value:integer)
| node(left: tree, right:tree)
a structural recursive algorithm would have the form
function computeSomething(x : tree) =
if x is null: base case
if x is leaf: do something with x.value
if x is node: do something with x.left,
do something with x.right,
combine the results
this is really the most obvious way to write any algorith that works on a data structure.
now, when you look at the integers (well, the natural numbers) as defined using the Peano axioms
integer = 0 | succ(integer)
you see that a structural recursive algorithm on integers looks like this
function computeSomething(x : integer) =
if x is 0 : base case
if x is succ(prev) : do something with prev
the too-well-known factorial function is about the most trivial example of
this form.
function call itself or use its own definition.

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