Difference between revisions of "Recursive Functions"
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h(6) &= h(-1)+1 & \text{top rule, since $x>5$}\cr | h(6) &= h(-1)+1 & \text{top rule, since $x>5$}\cr | ||
h(-1)&= h(-1+3) =h(2)& \text{bottom rule, since $x<0$}\cr | h(-1)&= h(-1+3) =h(2)& \text{bottom rule, since $x<0$}\cr | ||
h(2)&=2&\text{middle rule, since $0 \le x \ | h(2)&=2&\text{middle rule, since $0 \le x \le 5$}\cr | ||
\end{align}$$ | \end{align}$$ | ||
Because $h(-1) = h(2) = 2$, we now know that $h(6)=h(-1)+1 = 2+1=3$. And finally, $h(13)=h(6)+1= 3+1=4. | Because $h(-1) = h(2) = 2$, we now know that $h(6)=h(-1)+1 = 2+1=3$. | ||
And finally, $h(13)=h(6)+1= 3+1=4. | |||
== Online Resources == | == Online Resources == |
Revision as of 09:22, 1 August 2018
A definition that defines an object in terms of itself is said to be recursive. In computer science, recursion refers to a function or subroutine that calls itself, and it is a fundamental paradigm in programming. A recursive program is used for solving problems that can be broken down into sub-problems of the same type, doing so until the problem is easy enough to solve directly.
Examples
Fibonacci Numbers
A common recursive function that you’ve probably encountered is the Fibonacci numbers: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, and so on. That is, you get the next Fibonacci number by adding together the previous two. Mathematically, this is written as
$$f(N)=f(N-1)+f(N-2)$$
Try finding f(10). No doubt, you have the correct answer, because you intuitively stopped when you reach $f(1)$ and $f(0)$. To be formal about this, we need to define when the recursion stops, called the base cases. The base cases for the Fibonacci function is $f(0)=1$, and $f(1)=1$. The typical way to write this function is as follows: $$f(N)=\cases{1 & if $N=0$\cr 1 & if $N=1$\cr f(N-1)+f(N-2) & if $N > 1$}$$
Here is a Python implementation of the Fibonacci function:
def Fibonacci(x): if (x == 0) return 0 if (x == 1) return 1 return Fibonacci(x-1) + Fibonacci(x-2)
(As a challenge to the reader: How could you implement the Fibonacci function without using recursion?)
Factorial Function
Consider the factorial function, $n! = n * (n-1) * ... * 1$, with 0! defined as having a value of 1. We can define this recursively as follows:
$$f(x)=\cases {1 & if $x=0$\cr x*f(x-1) & if $x\gt 0$\cr }$$
WIth this definition, the factorial of a negative number is not defined.
Here is a Python implementation of the factorial function:
def Factorial(x): if (x<0) return 1 return x*Factorial(x-1)
In the implementation above, the method will never return if called wth a negative number. (Question: How would you fix the code to return, say, a 1 if called with a negative number?)
Some Definitions
A few definitions: Indirection recursion is when a function calls another function which eventually calls the original function. For example, A calls B, and then, before function B exits, function A is called (either by B or by a function that B calls). Single recursion is recursion with a single reference to itself, such as the factorial example above. Multiple recursion, illustrated by the Fibonacci number function, is when a function has multiple self references. Infinite recursion is a recursive function that never returns because it keeps calling itself. The program will eventually crash with an out of memory error message of some sort.
This ACSL category focuses on mathematical recursive functions rather than programming procedures; but you’ll see some of the latter.
Sample Problems
This ACSL category focuses on mathematical recursive functions rather than programming procedures; but you’ll see some of the latter.
Sample Problem 1
Problem: Find $g(11)$ given the following $$g(x)=\cases {g(x-3)+1 & if $x>0$\cr 3x & otherwise\cr }$$
Solution:
The evaluation proceeds top-down as follows:
$$\begin{align} g(11)&=g(8)+1 \cr g(8)&=g(5)+1 \cr g(5)&=g(2)+1\cr g(2)&=g(-1)+1\cr g(-1)&=-3\cr \end{align}$$
We now use what we know about $g(-1)$ to learn more values:
- We now know the value of $g(2): g(2)=-3+1=-2$
- We now know the value of $g(5): g(5)= -2+1=-1$
- We now know the value of $g(8): g(8) = -1+1=0$
- And finally, we now have the value of $g(11): g(11)=0+1=1$
Sample Problem 2
Problem: Find the value of $h(13)$ given the following definition of $h$:
$$h(x)=\cases {h(x-7)+1 & when $x>5$\cr x & when $0 \le x \le 5$\cr h(x+3) & when $x \lt 0$}$$
Solution:
$$\begin{align} h(13) &= h(6)+1 & \text{top rule, since $x>5$}\cr h(6) &= h(-1)+1 & \text{top rule, since $x>5$}\cr h(-1)&= h(-1+3) =h(2)& \text{bottom rule, since $x<0$}\cr h(2)&=2&\text{middle rule, since $0 \le x \le 5$}\cr \end{align}$$
Because $h(-1) = h(2) = 2$, we now know that $h(6)=h(-1)+1 = 2+1=3$.
And finally, $h(13)=h(6)+1= 3+1=4.
Online Resources
ACSL
The following videos show the solution to problems that have appeared in previous ACSL contests.
Recursion Example 1 (CalculusNguyenify)
The video walks through the solution to a straight-forward single-variable recursive function, that is, $f(x)=\cases{....}$ The problem appeared in ACSL Senior Division Contest #1, 2014-2015. | |
Recursion Example 2 (CalculusNguyenify)
The video walks through the solution to a 2-variable recursive function, that is, $f(x,y)=\cases{....}$ . The problem appeared in ACSL Senior Division Contest #1, 2014-2015. | |
Recursive Functions ACSL Example Problem (Tangerine Code)
The video walks through the solution to a 2-variable recursive function, that is, $f(x,y)=\cases{....}$ . |
Other Videos
Because recursion is such a fundamental concept in computer science, there is no end to the number of YouTube videos that cover the topic. There are dozens of walk-throughs of the factorial and Fibonacci functions, and of other classic algorithms such as Towers of Hanoi and Binary Trees. Some of the videos contain ads; ACSL is not responsible for the ads and does not receive compensation in any form for those ads.
Recursion lecture 1 (anim aland)
Prof. Alan Dorin from Monash University presents an wonderful introduction to recursion. The last part of the video uses factorial as an example. Taken note how his base case guards against infinite recursion. | |
Fibonacci Sequence - Anatomy of recursion and space complexity analysis (mycodeschool)
The video is hand-simulation on the whiteboard of the recursive code for computing a Fibonnaci number. The code uses a base case of | |
Towers of Hanoi (Arnaldo Pedro Figueira Figueira)
A nice explanation of the Towers of Hanoi from MIT edX Course: MITx: 6.00x Introduction to Computer Science and Programming. |