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Javascript Recursion
Very simply, what is javascript recusion? More specifically, Can anyone show some small code snippets where it could be applied(please do not use the factorial, egg chicken: thanks 😐), and where not, with an explanation of why
3 Réponses
+ 1
First off: Anything you can do with recursion you can do without and the other way around, so pick what works best. Some examples:
Say you have some function that takes 2 numbers a and b and you want to make sure a is always smaller than b:
function something(a, b){
if(a > b) return something(b, a);
// do something
}
Not saying it's good practice but I've seen it a lot.
Say you have a function that sends money but you can only send 1000€ max:
function send_money(amount){
while(amount > 1000){
send_money(1000);
amount -= 1000;
}
// send the rest of the money
}
Those are some of the more simple examples; more typical examples are usually a bit harder.
Say you have a network of cities and you want to visit them all:
function visit(city){
take_photo(city);
for(let neighbor of city.neighboring_cities()){
if(not_seen(neighbor))
visit(neighbor);
}
}
That's venturing into graphs and other data structures though.
(1/2)
+ 3
In general recursive functions tend to be less efficient than non-recursive ones, so if performance is a concern, then you should prefer non-recursion.
Some programming languages try to optimize some recursive functions (tail recursion, stream fusion), but as far as I know Javascript isn't one of them.
A general rule is to worry about performance last, so pick whatever code looks nicer. The third code snippet would look pretty horrible and 3 times as long without recursion, for example: Every city may have many neighbors and each of them has many neigbors and so on, so you get this branching out behaviour; that's where recursion really works well.
(2/2)
+ 2
Schindlabua Thanks.😊😊😊😊